Riehl Christina, Frederickson Megan E
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, 106A Guyot Hall, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, 25 Willcocks Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3B2.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2016 Feb 5;371(1687):20150090. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2015.0090.
Cheaters-genotypes that gain a selective advantage by taking the benefits of the social contributions of others while avoiding the costs of cooperating-are thought to pose a major threat to the evolutionary stability of cooperative societies. In order for cheaters to undermine cooperation, cheating must be an adaptive strategy: cheaters must have higher fitness than cooperators, and their behaviour must reduce the fitness of their cooperative partners. It is frequently suggested that cheating is not adaptive because cooperators have evolved mechanisms to punish these behaviours, thereby reducing the fitness of selfish individuals. However, a simpler hypothesis is that such societies arise precisely because cooperative strategies have been favoured over selfish ones-hence, behaviours that have been interpreted as 'cheating' may not actually result in increased fitness, even when they go unpunished. Here, we review the empirical evidence for cheating behaviours in animal societies, including cooperatively breeding vertebrates and social insects, and we ask whether such behaviours are primarily limited by punishment. Our review suggests that both cheating and punishment are probably rarer than often supposed. Uncooperative individuals typically have lower, not higher, fitness than cooperators; and when evidence suggests that cheating may be adaptive, it is often limited by frequency-dependent selection rather than by punishment. When apparently punitive behaviours do occur, it remains an open question whether they evolved in order to limit cheating, or whether they arose before the evolution of cooperation.
欺骗者基因型通过获取他人社会贡献的益处而避免合作成本来获得选择优势,被认为对合作社会的进化稳定性构成重大威胁。为了使欺骗者破坏合作,欺骗必须是一种适应性策略:欺骗者必须比合作者具有更高的适应性,并且他们的行为必须降低其合作伙伴的适应性。人们经常认为欺骗不是适应性的,因为合作者已经进化出惩罚这些行为的机制,从而降低自私个体的适应性。然而,一个更简单的假设是,这样的社会恰恰是因为合作策略比自私策略更受青睐而产生的——因此,即使未受惩罚,那些被解释为“欺骗”的行为实际上可能不会导致适应性增加。在这里,我们回顾了动物社会中欺骗行为的实证证据,包括合作繁殖的脊椎动物和社会性昆虫,并且我们探讨这些行为是否主要受惩罚限制。我们的综述表明,欺骗和惩罚可能都比通常认为的更为罕见。不合作的个体通常比合作者具有更低而非更高的适应性;并且当有证据表明欺骗可能是适应性的时候,它往往受频率依赖选择的限制而非惩罚。当明显的惩罚性行为确实发生时,它们是否是为了限制欺骗而进化,或者它们是否在合作进化之前就出现了,这仍然是一个悬而未决的问题。