Agrawal A F
Department of Biology and Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior, Indiana University, 1001 East 3rd Street, Bloomington, IN 47405-3700, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2001 May 22;268(1471):1099-104. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2001.1611.
In 1964, Hamilton formalized the idea of kin selection to explain the evolution of altruistic behaviours. Since then, numerous examples from a diverse array of taxa have shown that seemingly altruistic actions towards close relatives are a common phenomenon. Although many species use kin recognition to direct altruistic behaviours preferentially towards relatives, this important aspect of social biology is less well understood theoretically. I extend Hamilton's classic work by defining the conditions for the evolution of kin-directed altruism when recognizers are permitted to make acceptance (type I) and rejection (type II) errors in the identification of social partners with respect to kinship. The effect of errors in recognition on the evolution of kin-directed altruism depends on whether the population initially consists of unconditional altruists or non-altruists (i.e. alternative forms of non-recognizers). Factors affecting the level of these error rates themselves, their evolution and their long-term stability are discussed.
1964年,汉密尔顿将亲缘选择的概念形式化,以解释利他行为的进化。从那时起,来自各种不同分类群的大量例子表明,对近亲看似利他的行为是一种常见现象。尽管许多物种利用亲缘识别将利他行为优先导向亲属,但社会生物学的这一重要方面在理论上却鲜为人知。我扩展了汉密尔顿的经典著作,定义了在识别者在根据亲属关系识别社会伙伴时允许出现接受(I型)和拒绝(II型)错误的情况下,亲缘导向利他行为进化的条件。识别错误对亲缘导向利他行为进化的影响取决于种群最初是由无条件利他者还是非利他者(即非识别者的替代形式)组成。文中还讨论了影响这些错误率水平本身、它们的进化及其长期稳定性的因素。