Centre for Ecology and Conservation, University of Exeter, Penryn Campus, Cornwall TR10 9FE, UK.
Centre for Research in Animal Behaviour, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QG, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2022 May 23;377(1851):20210140. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2021.0140. Epub 2022 Apr 4.
War, in human and animal societies, can be extremely costly but can also offer significant benefits to the victorious group. We might expect groups to go into battle when the potential benefits of victory () outweigh the costs of escalated conflict (); however, and are unlikely to be distributed evenly in heterogeneous groups. For example, some leaders who make the decision to go to war may monopolize the benefits at little cost to themselves ('exploitative' leaders). By contrast, other leaders may willingly pay increased costs, above and beyond their share of ('heroic' leaders). We investigated conflict initiation and conflict participation in an ecological model where single-leader-multiple-follower groups came into conflict over natural resources. We found that small group size, low migration rate and frequent interaction between groups increased intergroup competition and the evolution of 'exploitative' leadership, while converse patterns favoured increased intragroup competition and the emergence of 'heroic' leaders. We also found evidence of an alternative leader/follower 'shared effort' outcome. Parameters that favoured high contributing 'heroic' leaders, and low contributing followers, facilitated transitions to more peaceful outcomes. We outline and discuss the key testable predictions of our model for empiricists studying intergroup conflict in humans and animals. This article is part of the theme issue 'Intergroup conflict across taxa'.
在人类和动物社会中,战争可能代价高昂,但也可能给胜利的群体带来巨大利益。我们可能期望群体在胜利的潜在利益()超过冲突升级的成本()时投入战斗;然而,收益和成本不太可能在异质群体中平均分配。例如,一些决定发动战争的领导人可能会以牺牲自己为代价垄断利益(“剥削型”领导人)。相比之下,其他领导人可能会自愿支付更高的成本,超出他们在收益中所占的份额(“英勇型”领导人)。我们在一个生态模型中调查了冲突的发起和冲突的参与,在这个模型中,由单一领导者和多个追随者组成的群体为争夺自然资源而发生冲突。我们发现,小群体规模、低迁移率和群体之间频繁的相互作用增加了群体间的竞争和“剥削型”领导的进化,而相反的模式则有利于增加群体内的竞争和“英勇型”领导的出现。我们还发现了替代的领导/追随者“共同努力”结果的证据。有利于高贡献的“英勇型”领导人和低贡献的追随者的参数促进了向更加和平的结果的转变。我们概述并讨论了我们的模型对于研究人类和动物群体间冲突的经验主义者的关键可检验预测。本文是主题为“跨物种种群的群体间冲突”的特刊的一部分。