West Stuart A, Pen Ido, Griffin Ashleigh S
Institute of Cell, Animal and Population Biology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, UK.
Science. 2002 Apr 5;296(5565):72-5. doi: 10.1126/science.1065507.
Individuals are predicted to behave more altruistically and less competitively toward their relatives, because they share a relatively high proportion of their genes (e.g., one-half for siblings and one-eighth for cousins). Consequently, by helping a relative reproduce, an individual passes its genes to the next generation, increasing their Darwinian fitness. This idea, termed kin selection, has been applied to a wide range of phenomena in systems ranging from replicating molecules to humans. Nevertheless, competition between relatives can reduce, and even totally negate, the kin-selected benefits of altruism toward relatives. Recent theoretical work has clarified the processes and selective forces underlying this effect and has demonstrated the generality of the effect of competition between relatives.
预计个体对其亲属会表现得更利他,竞争更少,因为他们共享相对较高比例的基因(例如,兄弟姐妹之间是二分之一,堂兄弟姐妹之间是八分之一)。因此,通过帮助亲属繁殖,个体将其基因传递给下一代,提高了它们的达尔文适应性。这个被称为亲缘选择的观点,已被应用于从复制分子到人类等各种系统中的广泛现象。然而,亲属之间的竞争会减少,甚至完全抵消对亲属利他行为所带来的亲缘选择益处。最近的理论研究阐明了这种效应背后的过程和选择力量,并证明了亲属之间竞争效应的普遍性。