Johnstone Rufus A, Rodrigues António M M
Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK
Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK Wolfson College, Barton Road, Cambridge CB3 9BB, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2016 Feb 5;371(1687):20150086. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2015.0086.
In this paper, we draw the attention of biologists to a result from the economic literature, which suggests that when individuals are engaged in a communal activity of benefit to all, selection may favour cooperative sharing of resources even among non-relatives. Provided that group members all invest some resources in the public good, they should refrain from conflict over the division of these resources. The reason is that, given diminishing returns on investment in public and private goods, claiming (or ceding) a greater share of total resources only leads to the actor (or its competitors) investing more in the public good, such that the marginal costs and benefits of investment remain in balance. This cancels out any individual benefits of resource competition. We illustrate how this idea may be applied in the context of biparental care, using a sequential game in which parents first compete with one another over resources, and then choose how to allocate the resources they each obtain to care of their joint young (public good) versus their own survival and future reproductive success (private good). We show that when the two parents both invest in care to some extent, they should refrain from any conflict over the division of resources. The same effect can also support asymmetric outcomes in which one parent competes for resources and invests in care, whereas the other does not invest but refrains from competition. The fact that the caring parent gains higher fitness pay-offs at these equilibria suggests that abandoning a partner is not always to the latter's detriment, when the potential for resource competition is taken into account, but may instead be of benefit to the 'abandoned' mate.
在本文中,我们提请生物学家关注经济学文献中的一个结果,该结果表明,当个体参与对所有人都有益的集体活动时,即使在非亲属之间,选择也可能有利于资源的合作共享。只要群体成员都为公共利益投入一些资源,他们就应该避免在这些资源的分配上发生冲突。原因在于,鉴于对公共和私人产品投资的收益递减,要求(或让出)更大份额的总资源只会导致行为者(或其竞争者)在公共利益上投入更多,从而使投资的边际成本和收益保持平衡。这抵消了资源竞争带来的任何个体利益。我们通过一个序贯博弈来说明这个观点如何应用于双亲照料的情境,在这个博弈中,父母首先相互争夺资源,然后选择如何将各自获得的资源分配用于照料他们共同的后代(公共利益)与自身的生存和未来繁殖成功(私人利益)。我们表明,当双亲都在一定程度上投入照料时,他们应该避免在资源分配上发生任何冲突。同样的效应也可以支持不对称的结果,即一方父母争夺资源并投入照料,而另一方不投入但也不参与竞争。在这些均衡状态下,照料的一方获得更高的适应度回报这一事实表明,考虑到资源竞争的可能性,抛弃伴侣并不总是对后者不利,反而可能对“被抛弃”的配偶有益。