Abstract

ABSTRACTThe most widely cited explanation for the evolution of reliable signals is Zahavi's so‐called Handicap Principle, which proposes that signals are honest because they are costly to produce. Here we provide a critical review of the Handicap Principle and its theoretical development. We explain why this idea is erroneous, and how it nevertheless became widely accepted as the leading explanation for honest signalling. In 1975, Zahavi proposed that elaborate secondary sexual characters impose ‘handicaps’ on male survival, not due to inadvertent signalling trade‐offs, but as a mechanism that functions to demonstrate males' genetic quality to potential mates. His handicap hypothesis received many criticisms, and in response, Zahavi clarified his hypothesis and explained that it assumes that signals are wasteful as well as costly, and that they evolve because wastefulness enforces honesty. He proposed that signals evolve under ‘signal selection’, a non‐Darwinian type of selection that favours waste rather than efficiency. He maintained that the handicap hypothesis provides a general principle to explain the evolution of all types of signalling systems, i.e. the Handicap Principle. In 1977, Zahavi proposed a second hypothesis for honest signalling, which received many different labels and interpretations, although it was assumed to be another example of handicap signalling. In 1990, Grafen published models that he claimed vindicated Zahavi's Handicap Principle. His conclusions were widely accepted and the Handicap Principle subsequently became the dominant paradigm for explaining the evolution of honest signalling in the biological and social sciences. Researchers have subsequently focused on testing predications of the Handicap Principle, such as measuring the absolute costs of honest signals (and using energetic and other proximate costs as proxies for fitness), but very few have attempted to test Grafen's models. We show that Grafen's models do not support the handicap hypothesis, although they do support Zahavi's second hypothesis, which proposes that males adjust their investment into the expression of their sexual signals according to their condition and ability to bear the costs (and risks to their survival). Rather than being wasteful over‐investments, honest signals evolve in this scenario because selection favours efficient and optimal investment into signal expression and minimizes signalling costs. This idea is very different from the handicap hypothesis, but it has been widely misinterpreted and equated to the Handicap Principle. Theoretical studies have since shown that signalling costs paid at the equilibrium are neither sufficient nor necessary to maintain signal honesty, and that honesty can evolve through differential benefits, as well as differential costs. There have been increasing criticisms of the Handicap Principle, but they have focused on the limitations of Grafen's model and overlooked the fact that it is not a handicap model. This model is better understood within a Darwinian framework of adaptive signalling trade‐offs, without the added burden and confusing logic of the Handicap Principle. There is no theoretical or empirical support for the Handicap Principle and the time is long overdue to usher this idea into an ‘honorable retirement’.

Highlights

  • [The Handicap Principle is] one of the most enduring and well known of all theories in animal behavior and behavioral ecology . . . (Higham, 2014, p. 8)

  • Several theoretical models attempted to test Zahavi’s verbal model, but none provided support. (i) The first model confirmed that choosy females will incur a fitness disadvantage by producing offspring carrying costly secondary sexual traits, and that any advantages that choosy females potentially gain soon disappear, so that such mating preferences become a disadvantage (Davis & O’Donald, 1976); (ii) A second model considered the evolution of sex-limited signals, so that daughters of choosy females inherit their father’s high quality without his costly ornaments, but this version did not work either (Maynard Smith, 1976); and (iii) A third model confirmed that this model does not work, suggested that it modulates the dynamics of runaway sexual selection (Bell, 1978)

  • He developed a model that showed that the revealing handicap can work but only under certain conditions, i.e. when the fitness effects of the costs of signalling and viability genes combine non-multiplicatively, or the costly signal directly reveals genetic quality (‘revealing handicap’). He found that the costly signalling trait cannot spread if the frequency of the preference in females is below a threshold. He concluded that ‘the handicap principle does work – sometimes’, and that it can cause the runaway exaggeration of male sexual signals and female mating preferences, when the above conditions are fulfilled; (iv) Grafen (1990b) published a sexual selection model, which he concluded supports the Handicap Principle, but this was a misinterpretation, as we show below (Section VII); and (v) Iwasa et al (1991) found support for Zahavi’s (1977b) ‘condition-dependent handicap’, as well as the ‘revealing handicap’ model, their model depends on a dubious assumption about biased mutation pressure affecting viability

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

[The Handicap Principle is] one of the most enduring and well known of all theories in animal behavior and behavioral ecology . . . (Higham, 2014, p. 8). The Handicap Principle is the most widely accepted explanation for explaining honest signalling in the biological sciences (Maynard Smith & Harper, 2003; Searcy & Nowicki, 2005; Bradbury & Vehrencamp, 2011) (Fig. 1) It inspired an explosion of research on sexual selection and animal communication (Andersson, 1994; Johnstone, 1995). We critically evaluate Zahavi’s Handicap Principle, and provide a comprehensive overview of its theoretical development and main problems We explain why this idea is illogical and contrary to Darwinian principles, and why it is not supported by Grafen’s (or any other) theoretical models, contrary to what has been widely assumed. We evaluate Zahavi’s (1975) original proposal and his subsequent attempts to clarify his Handicap Principle (Zahavi, 1977a, 1981, 1987; Zahavi & Zahavi, 1997) (Sections III and IV) We examine another hypothesis that Zahavi (1977b) proposed to explain reliable signals, which is logical and consistent with evolutionary biology, but widely misinterpreted (Sections V and VI). We hope that by clarifying the differences between the Handicap Principle and Grafen’s models (and other hypotheses that have been mistaken as handicap models), we can reject this erroneous concept and put an end to this long debate

WHAT IS THE HANDICAP PRINCIPLE?
ZAHAVI’S HANDICAP HYPOTHESIS
ZAHAVI’S CLARIFICATIONS OF HIS HANDICAP PRINCIPLE
ZAHAVI’S ADAPTIVE CONDITION-DEPENDENT SIGNALLING HYPOTHESIS
SEXUAL SELECTION AND HONEST SIGNALLING MODELS
(3) Summary
GRAFEN’S STRATEGIC CHOICE SIGNALLING MODEL
VIII. THE HANDICAP PARADIGM
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call