Reluga Timothy C, Viscido Steven
Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Washington, Box 352420, Seattle, WA 98195-2420, USA.
J Theor Biol. 2005 May 21;234(2):213-25. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2004.11.035. Epub 2005 Jan 28.
Single species aggregations are a commonly observed phenomenon. One potential explanation for these aggregations is provided by the selfish herd hypothesis, which states that aggregations result from individual efforts to reduce personnel predation risk at the expense of group-mates. Not all movement rules based on the selfish herd hypothesis are consistent with observed animal behavior. Previous work has shown that herd-like aggregations are not generated by movement rules limited to local interactions between nearest neighbors. Instead, rules generating realistic herds appear to require delocalized interactions. To date, it has been an open question whether or not the necessary delocalization can emerge from local interactions under natural selection. To address this question, we study an individual-based model with a single quantitative genetic trait that controls the influence of neighbors as a function of distance. The results indicate that predation-based selection can increase the influence of distant neighbors relative to near neighbors. Our results lend support for the idea that selfish herd behavior can arise from localized movement rules under natural selection.
单一物种聚集是一种常见现象。自私群体假说为这些聚集现象提供了一种可能的解释,该假说认为聚集是个体为降低自身被捕食风险而以牺牲同伴为代价努力的结果。并非所有基于自私群体假说的运动规则都与观察到的动物行为一致。先前的研究表明,类似群体的聚集并非由仅限于最近邻之间局部相互作用的运动规则产生。相反,产生现实群体的规则似乎需要非局部相互作用。迄今为止,在自然选择下局部相互作用是否能产生必要的非局部性一直是个悬而未决的问题。为解决这个问题,我们研究了一个基于个体的模型,该模型具有一个单一的数量遗传性状,该性状根据距离控制邻居的影响。结果表明,基于捕食的选择可以增加远处邻居相对于近处邻居的影响。我们的结果支持了自私群体行为可以在自然选择下由局部运动规则产生这一观点。