Behavioural Ecology Laboratory, Faculty of Science, University of Neuchâtel, Emile-Argand 11, 2000 Neuchâtel, Switzerland.
Department of Anthropology and Anthropological Museum, University of Zurich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, 8057 Zurich, Switzerland.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2022 May 23;377(1851):20210150. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2021.0150. Epub 2022 Apr 4.
In many group-living mammals, philopatric females form the stable core of the group and defend food or shelter against other groups of females. Where males are larger, their participation could give their female group the edge. How can females secure the contribution of males that are neither the father of current infants, nor the dominant male expecting to sire the next generation of infants? It has been proposed that females recruit these males as 'hired guns', receiving social support and copulations in exchange for fighting, against the interests of the dominant male. We first develop the logic of this hypothesis in unprecedented detail by considering the potential pay-off consequences for females and males. We then provide empirical evidence for the existence of hired guns in this context in several primate species. The game-theoretical aspects of the phenomenon remain to be studied, as is the distribution across contexts (e.g. predation avoidance) and species of the hired gun phenomenon. This article is part of the theme issue 'Intergroup conflict across taxa'.
在许多群体生活的哺乳动物中,亲代雌性形成群体的稳定核心,并与其他雌性群体争夺食物或庇护所。在雄性体型较大的情况下,它们的参与可能会使雌性群体具有优势。那么,雌性如何确保那些既不是当前幼崽的父亲,也不是期望生育下一代幼崽的优势雄性提供贡献呢?有人提出,雌性会招募这些雄性作为“雇佣枪手”,通过提供社会支持和交配来换取战斗,这违背了优势雄性的利益。我们首先通过考虑雌性和雄性的潜在收益后果,前所未有地详细阐述了这一假设的逻辑。然后,我们在几个灵长类物种中提供了在这种情况下存在雇佣枪手的实证证据。这种现象的博弈论方面仍有待研究,包括雇佣枪手现象在不同情境(例如,避免捕食)和物种中的分布情况。本文是主题为“跨分类群的群体间冲突”的一部分。