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| Figure 1 - Offspring and sibling relatedness with monogamous and polyandrous relationships. |
Researchers led by William Hughes of the University of Leeds in England examined 267 eusocial species of bees, wasps and ants and found that the insects evolved from monogamous conditions, which maximize a group’s degree of relatedness (Hughes 2008). When Hughes's group examined the distribution of monogamous versus polygamous species among the eight branches of the family tree in which eusociality had independently evolved, the researchers concluded that each branch had started with a monogamous species.
In
a lot of monogamous species, the death of a partner would
mean the individual would start looking for a new mate, which would
affect
relatedness as family members would be much more related to their offspring
than their
sibling. This would lower the chances for altruism and ultimately hinder
the
evolution of eusociality. The death of a partner in a strict lifetime-monogamous relationship obviously
presents a large problem in the development in eusocial colonies, and is
something that will be covered in a future post. Stay tuned!
References:
Boomsma JJ. Lifetime
monogamy and the evolution of eusociality., 2009, Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci.
2009;364(1533):3191–3207. doi:10.1098/rstb.2009.0101
Edward O. Wilson, Social Insects, 1971,
Altruism, Spite and Greenbeards, https://science.sciencemag.org/content/327/5971/1341, 29/03/20


This is an interesting idea. However, I’m not sure I follow because, from a genetic sense, a parent is always related to its offspring by 0.5 and siblings are related to each other by 0.5, unless you have a haplodiploid genetic system or severe inbreeding. How would changing who you mate with change the coefficient of relatedness here?
ReplyDeleteThe idea is that siblings are related to each other by 0.5 only within a single litter for non monogamous species, so if a new partner is chosen the inter-sibling relatedness drops. A lifetime monogamous species with maintain both at 0.5 for every litter "opening the door" for evolution towards eusocialism.
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