Self-recognition, color signals, and cycles of greenbeard mutualism and altruism
- 9 May 2006
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 103 (19) , 7372-7377
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0510260103
Abstract
Altruism presents a challenge to evolutionary theory because selection should favor selfish over caring strategies. Greenbeard altruism resolves this paradox by allowing cooperators to identify individuals carrying similar alleles producing a form of genic selection. In side-blotched lizards, genetically similar but unrelated blue male morphs settle on adjacent territories and cooperate. Here we show that payoffs of cooperation depend on asymmetric costs of orange neighbors. One blue male experiences low fitness and buffers his unrelated partner from aggressive orange males despite the potential benefits of defection. We show that recognition behavior is highly heritable in nature, and we map genetic factors underlying color and self-recognition behavior of genetic similarity in both sexes. Recognition and cooperation arise from genome-wide factors based on our mapping study of the location of genes responsible for self-recognition behavior, recognition of blue color, and the color locus. Our results provide an example of greenbeard interactions in a vertebrate that are typified by cycles of greenbeard mutualism interspersed with phases of transient true altruism. Such cycles provide a mechanism encouraging the origin and stability of true altruism.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Genetic and Maternal Determinants of Effective Dispersal: The Effect of Sire Genotype and Size at Birth in Side‐Blotched LizardsThe American Naturalist, 2006
- Cadherins in maternal–foetal interactions: red queen with a green beard?Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2005
- Pleiotropy as a mechanism to stabilize cooperationNature, 2004
- ALTRUISM VIA KIN-SELECTION STRATEGIES THAT RELY ON ARBITRARY TAGS WITH WHICH THEY COEVOLVEEvolution, 2004
- SOCIALLY MEDIATED SPECIATIONEvolution, 2003
- Local dispersal promotes biodiversity in a real-life game of rock–paper–scissorsNature, 2002
- SOCIAL CAUSES OF CORRELATIONAL SELECTION AND THE RESOLUTION OF A HERITABLE THROAT COLOR POLYMORPHISM IN A LIZARDEvolution, 2001
- Testosterone, Endurance, and Darwinian Fitness: Natural and Sexual Selection on the Physiological Bases of Alternative Male Behaviors in Side-Blotched LizardsHormones and Behavior, 2000
- The rock–paper–scissors game and the evolution of alternative male strategiesNature, 1996
- The genetical evolution of social behaviour. IJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1964