Abstract
Inclusive fitness theory provides the conceptual framework for our current understanding of social evolution, and empirical studies suggest that kin selection is a critical process in the evolution of animal sociality. A key prediction of inclusive fitness theory is that altruistic behaviour evolves when the costs incurred by an altruist (c) are outweighed by the benefit to the recipient (b), weighted by the relatedness of altruist to recipient (r), i.e. Hamilton's rule rb > c. Despite its central importance in social evolution theory, there have been relatively few empirical tests of Hamilton's rule, and hardly any among cooperatively breeding vertebrates, leading some authors to question its utility. Here, we use data from a long-term study of cooperatively breeding long-tailed tits Aegithalos caudatus to examine whether helping behaviour satisfies Hamilton's condition for the evolution of altruism. We show that helpers are altruistic because they incur survival costs through the provision of alloparental care for offspring. However, they also accrue substantial benefits through increased survival of related breeders and offspring, and despite the low average relatedness of helpers to recipients, these benefits of helping outweigh the costs incurred. We conclude that Hamilton's rule for the evolution of altruistic helping behaviour is satisfied in this species.
Highlights
Our understanding of evolution has been transformed in the 50 years since Hamilton [1] published his seminal paper on inclusive fitness theory
One of the earliest themes to emerge from these studies, leading to the early acceptance of the process of kin selection as a key driver of vertebrate sociality, was that cooperative breeding involving apparently altruistic care by non-breeders generally occurs within family groups
Despite the important advances made by these studies, most of which have strongly supported kin selection as a key process in avian social evolution, very few studies have attempted to directly test a key prediction of inclusive fitness theory, Hamilton’s rule
Summary
Our understanding of evolution has been transformed in the 50 years since Hamilton [1] published his seminal paper on inclusive fitness theory. Despite the important advances made by these studies, most of which have strongly supported kin selection as a key process in avian social evolution, very few studies have attempted to directly test a key prediction of inclusive fitness theory, Hamilton’s rule. Long-tailed tits have several advantages over most cooperative species for this analysis, the most important being the relative simplicity of their cooperative breeding system, in which all helpers are failed breeders that redirect their care to help feed nestlings belonging to other pairs They are very short lived compared with most cooperative species, facilitating measurement of the costs and benefits of alternative behaviours and allowing the rapid accumulation of complete life histories for the estimation of lifetime reproductive success [35]. We first estimate the parameters r, b and c, and test whether Hamilton’s condition for the evolution of apparently altruistic helping behaviour is satisfied in this species
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More From: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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