合作狩猎的进化

Pub Date : 1988-08-01 DOI:10.1086/284844
C. Packer, L. Ruttan
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引用次数: 447

摘要

利用一系列博弈论模型,我们提出了关于合作狩猎进化的两个主要预测。首先,我们明确了个体应该集体狩猎而不是单独狩猎的条件。当一个群体每次狩猎只捕获一个猎物时,合作的预期收益很少超过单独狩猎的优势,因为猎物必须在群体成员之间分配。只有当孤独个体的觅食效率较低时,合作捕获相同的猎物才能产生足够的互利;否则,每只个体最好分开捕食。相比之下,在一次狩猎中捕获多个猎物的物种不会面临类似的群体劣势,也不应该同样受到个体觅食效率高的限制而单独狩猎。然而,这些预测并没有得到单独狩猎和群体狩猎物种个体狩猎成功率的比较的很好支持。与之前的评论一致,我们认为许多物种的合作狩猎更多的是群居性的结果,而不是进化的原因。然而,合作狩猎确实经常出现在捕获多个猎物的物种中成为群体的重要原因。其次,我们明确了群体成员合作狩猎的条件。在那些捕获大到足以被不合作的同伴吃掉的猎物的物种中,欺骗的诱惑很普遍。因此,骗子可以避免狩猎和捕获猎物的成本。当个体独自捕获大型猎物的可能性很低时,合作是最有可能的。在这些条件下,第二个猎人可以充分增加这对搭档捕获猎物的机会,以克服他自己参与狩猎的成本。然而,欺骗的诱惑随着群体规模的增加而增加,因为每增加一个猎人,就越不可能克服他的狩猎成本。相比之下,当猎物很小,只有成功的猎人才能以捕获的猎物为食时,就没有欺骗的诱惑了。来自28项群体狩猎研究的数据大体上符合这些预测。群体成员在捕猎小猎物时总是合作的。当群体狩猎大型猎物时,在单独狩猎成功率很低的情况下,合作往往发生,而在单独狩猎成功率高、群体规模大的情况下,欺骗似乎很常见。尽管反复猎捕单个大型猎物通常符合反复囚徒困境的条件,但我们几乎没有证据表明合作是从“以牙还牙”的狩猎策略进化而来的。我们明确了亲属关系、个体狩猎能力差异和行为优势对单个大型猎物合作狩猎进化的理论影响。我们表明,在狩猎能力存在极端个体差异的地方,不太可能发现“以牙还牙”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Evolution of Cooperative Hunting
Using a series of game-theoretical models, we develop two major predictions concerning the evolution of cooperative hunting. First, we specify the conditions under which individuals should hunt in groups rather than solitarily. When a group captures only a single prey per hunt, the expected benefits from cooperation rarely outweigh the advantages of hunting alone, since the prey must be divided between group members. Cooperation to capture the same prey can confer sufficient mutual benefit only when solitaries have low foraging efficiency; otherwise, each individual would do better to hunt separate prey. In contrast, species that capture multiple prey in a single hunt are not faced with similar disadvantages from grouping and should not be similarly constrained to hunt alone by high individual foraging efficiency. However, these predictions are not well supported by comparisons of individual hunting success in species that hunt alone and in groups. Consistent with previous reviewers, we consider that cooperative hunting in many species is more often a consequence of gregariousness than its evolutionary cause. However, cooperative hunting does often appear to be an important cause of grouping in species that take multiple prey. Second, we specify the conditions under which group members should hunt cooperatively. A temptation to cheat is prevalent in species that capture prey large enough to be scavenged by noncooperative companions. Cheaters can thereby avoid the costs of hunting and prey capture. Cooperation is most likely when an individual has a low probability of capturing a large prey by itself. Under these conditions, a second hunter can sufficiently increase the pair's chances of capturing the prey to overcome his own costs of participating in the hunt. However, the temptation to cheat increases with group size, since each additional hunter is decreasingly likely to overcome his costs of hunting. In contrast, there is no temptation to cheat when prey size is so small that only the successful hunter can feed from the captured prey. Data from 28 studies of group hunting generally conform to these predictions. Group members always cooperate when hunting small prey. When groups hunt large prey, cooperation mostly occurs when solo hunting success is very low, whereas cheating appears to be common when solo hunting success is high and group size is large. Although repeated hunting of a single large prey often conforms to the conditions of the iterated prisoner's dilemma, we have little evidence that cooperation has evolved from a "tit-for-tat" hunting strategy. We specify the theoretical effects of kinship, individual differences in hunting ability, and behavioral dominance on the evolution of cooperative hunting of single large prey. We show that "tit-for-tat" is unlikely to be found where there are extreme individual differences in hunting ability.
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