Trinidadian guppies use a social heuristic that can support cooperation among non-kin
Darden, S-K; James, R; Cave, JM; et al.Brask, JB; Croft, DP
Date: 9 September 2020
Article
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Publisher
Royal Society
Publisher DOI
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Abstract
Cooperation among non-kin is well documented in humans and widespread in non-human
animals, but explaining the occurrence of cooperation in the absence of inclusive fitness
benefits has proven a significant challenge. Current theoretical explanations converge on a
single point: co-operators can prevail when they cluster in social ...
Cooperation among non-kin is well documented in humans and widespread in non-human
animals, but explaining the occurrence of cooperation in the absence of inclusive fitness
benefits has proven a significant challenge. Current theoretical explanations converge on a
single point: co-operators can prevail when they cluster in social space. However, we know
very little about the real-world mechanisms that drive such clustering, particularly in systems
where cognitive limitations make it unlikely that mechanisms such as score keeping and
reputation are at play. Here we show that Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata) use a ‘Walk
Away’ strategy, a simple social heuristic by which assortment by cooperativeness can come
about among mobile agents. Guppies cooperate during predator inspection and we found that
when experiencing defection in this context, individuals prefer to move to a new social
environment, despite having no prior information about this new social group. Our results
provide evidence in non-human animals that individuals use a simple social partner updating
strategy in response to defection, supporting theoretical work applying heuristics to
understanding the proximate mechanisms underpinning the evolution of cooperation among
non-kin.
Psychology - old structure
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