Social interactions generate complex selection patterns in virtual worlds.

IF 2.1 3区 生物学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Francesca Santostefano, Maxime Fraser Franco, Pierre-Olivier Montiglio
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Abstract

Understanding the influence of social interactions on individual fitness is key to improving our predictions of phenotypic evolution. However, we often overlook the different components of selection regimes arising from interactions among organisms, including social, correlational, and indirect selection. This is due to the challenging sampling efforts required in natural populations to measure phenotypes expressed during interactions and individual fitness. Furthermore, behaviours are crucial in mediating social interactions, yet few studies have explicitly quantified these selection components on behavioural traits. In this study, we capitalize on an online multiplayer video game as a source of extensive data recording direct social interactions among prey, where prey collaborate to escape a predator in realistic ecological settings. We estimate natural and social selection and their contribution to total selection on behavioural traits mediating competition, cooperation, and predator-prey interactions. Behaviours of other prey in a group impact an individual's survival, and thus are under social selection. Depending on whether selection pressures on behaviours are synergistic or conflicting, social interactions enhance or mitigate the strength of natural selection, although natural selection remains the main driving force. Indirect selection through correlations among traits also contributed to the total selection. Thus, failing to account for the effects of social interactions and indirect selection would lead to a misestimation of the total selection acting on traits. Dissecting the contribution of each component to the total selection differential allowed us to investigate the causal mechanisms relating behaviour to fitness and quantify the importance of the behaviours of conspecifics as agents of selection. Our study emphasizes that social interactions generate complex selective regimes even in a relatively simple ecological environment.

社交互动在虚拟世界中产生了复杂的选择模式。
了解社会互动对个体适应性的影响是我们改进表型进化预测的关键。然而,我们往往忽视了生物间相互作用所产生的选择机制的不同组成部分,包括社会选择、相关选择和间接选择。这是因为在自然种群中,要测量互动过程中表现出的表型和个体适合度,需要进行极具挑战性的取样工作。此外,行为在调解社会互动中至关重要,但很少有研究明确量化这些行为特征上的选择成分。在本研究中,我们利用在线多人电子游戏作为广泛的数据来源,记录了猎物之间的直接社会互动。我们估算了自然选择和社会选择,以及它们对竞争、合作和捕食者与猎物之间互动的行为特征总选择的贡献。群体中其他猎物的行为会影响个体的生存,因此会受到社会选择的影响。尽管自然选择仍然是主要的驱动力,但社会互动会增强或减轻自然选择的强度,这取决于对行为的选择压力是协同作用还是相互冲突。通过性状间的相关性进行的间接选择也对总的选择起到了作用。因此,如果不考虑社会互动和间接选择的影响,就会错误地估计作用于性状的总选择。通过分析每个因素对总选择差异的贡献,我们可以研究行为与适应性之间的因果机制,并量化同种动物行为作为选择媒介的重要性。我们的研究强调,即使在相对简单的生态环境中,社会互动也会产生复杂的选择机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.80%
发文量
152
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: It covers both micro- and macro-evolution of all types of organisms. The aim of the Journal is to integrate perspectives across molecular and microbial evolution, behaviour, genetics, ecology, life histories, development, palaeontology, systematics and morphology.
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