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群体生活开始时的健身益处和新兴分工。

Fitness benefits and emergent division of labour at the onset of group living.

机构信息

Laboratory of Social Evolution and Behavior, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA.

Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.

出版信息

Nature. 2018 Aug;560(7720):635-638. doi: 10.1038/s41586-018-0422-6. Epub 2018 Aug 22.

Abstract

The initial fitness benefits of group living are considered to be the greatest hurdle to the evolution of sociality, and evolutionary theory predicts that these benefits need to arise at very small group sizes. Such benefits are thought to emerge partly from scaling effects that increase efficiency as group size increases. In social insects and other taxa, the benefits of group living have been proposed to stem from division of labour, which is characterized by between-individual variability and within-individual consistency (specialization) in task performance. However, at the onset of sociality groups were probably small and composed of similar individuals with potentially redundant-rather than complementary-function. Self-organization theory suggests that division of labour can emerge even in relatively small, simple groups. However, empirical data on the effects of group size on division of labour and on fitness remain equivocal. Here we use long-term automated behavioural tracking in clonal ant colonies, combined with mathematical modelling, to show that increases in the size of social groups can generate division of labour among extremely similar workers, in groups as small as six individuals. These early effects on behaviour were associated with large increases in homeostasis-the maintenance of stable conditions in the colony-and per capita fitness. Our model suggests that increases in homeostasis are primarily driven by increases in group size itself, and to a smaller extent by a higher division of labour. Our results indicate that division of labour, increased homeostasis and higher fitness can emerge naturally in social groups that are small and homogeneous, and that scaling effects associated with increasing group size can thus promote social cohesion at the incipient stages of group living.

摘要

群体生活的最初适应性益处被认为是社会性进化的最大障碍,进化理论预测这些益处需要在非常小的群体规模中出现。这种益处部分源于随着群体规模的增加而提高效率的规模效应。在社会性昆虫和其他分类群中,群体生活的益处被认为源于劳动分工,其特征是个体间的可变性和个体内任务执行的一致性(专业化)。然而,在社会性出现的早期,群体可能很小,由具有潜在冗余功能而不是互补功能的相似个体组成。自组织理论表明,即使在相对较小、简单的群体中,劳动分工也可以出现。然而,关于群体大小对劳动分工和适应性的影响的实证数据仍然存在争议。在这里,我们使用克隆蚂蚁群体的长期自动化行为跟踪,结合数学模型,表明随着社会群体规模的增加,可以在小至 6 个个体的群体中产生极其相似的工人之间的劳动分工。这些对行为的早期影响与体内平衡(殖民地中稳定条件的维持)和人均适应性的大幅增加有关。我们的模型表明,体内平衡的增加主要是由群体规模本身的增加驱动的,而较小程度上是由更高的劳动分工驱动的。我们的结果表明,劳动分工、体内平衡的增加和更高的适应性可以在小而同质的社会群体中自然出现,并且与群体规模增加相关的规模效应可以促进群体生活初期的社会凝聚力。

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