Nunn Charles L, Craft Meggan E, Gillespie Thomas R, Schaller Mark, Kappeler Peter M
Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Box 90383, Durham, NC 27708, USA Duke Global Health Institute, Duke University, 310 Trent Drive, Durham, NC 27710, USA
Department of Veterinary Population Medicine, University of Minnesota, St Paul, MN 55108, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2015 May 26;370(1669). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2014.0115.
This theme issue has highlighted the links between sociality, health and fitness in a broad range of organisms, and with approaches that include field and captive studies of animals, comparative and meta-analyses, theoretical modelling and clinical and psychological studies of humans. In this concluding chapter, we synthesize the results of these diverse studies into some of the key concepts discussed in this issue, focusing on risks of infectious disease through social contact, the effects of competition in groups on susceptibility to disease, and the integration of sociality into research on life-history trade-offs. Interestingly, the studies in this issue both support pre-existing hypotheses, and in other ways challenge those hypotheses. We focus on unexpected results, including a lack of association between ectoparasites and fitness and weak results from a meta-analysis of the links between dominance rank and immune function, and place these results in a broader context. We also review relevant topics that were not covered fully in this theme issue, including self-medication and sickness behaviours, society-level defences against infectious disease, sexual selection, evolutionary medicine, implications for conservation biology and selective pressures on parasite traits. We conclude by identifying general open questions to stimulate and guide future research on the links between sociality, health and fitness.
本专题突出了广泛生物体中社会性、健康与适应性之间的联系,所采用的方法包括对动物的野外和圈养研究、比较分析和元分析、理论建模以及对人类的临床和心理学研究。在本章结语中,我们将这些不同研究的结果综合为本期讨论的一些关键概念,重点关注通过社会接触感染传染病的风险、群体竞争对疾病易感性的影响,以及将社会性纳入生活史权衡研究。有趣的是,本期的研究既支持了先前存在的假设,又在其他方面对这些假设提出了挑战。我们关注意外结果,包括体外寄生虫与适应性之间缺乏关联,以及对优势等级与免疫功能之间联系的元分析结果不显著,并将这些结果置于更广泛的背景中。我们还回顾了本专题未充分涵盖的相关主题,包括自我药疗和疾病行为、社会层面针对传染病的防御、性选择、进化医学、对保护生物学的影响以及对寄生虫特征的选择压力。我们通过确定一般性的开放性问题来结束本文,以激发和指导未来关于社会性、健康与适应性之间联系的研究。