olof leimar, department of zoology, stockholm university biology and game theory where are we now...

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Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

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Page 1: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University

Biology and game theoryWhere are we now and how did we come here?

A biologist’s perspective

Page 2: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

The Logic of Animal Conflict

Maynard Smith & Price (1973)

Mule deer males fighting Arabian oryx males fighting

Page 3: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

“reducing intra-specific damage”

Julian Huxley (1966). Ritualization of behaviour in animals and man.

Page 4: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

The logic of asymmetric contests

Maynard Smith & Parker (1976)

Papilio zelicaon male Hilltopping P. zelicaon male

Page 5: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

“The resident always wins”Davies (1978). Territorial defence in the speckled wood butterfly (Pararge aegeria)

Page 6: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Typical habitat for speckled wood butterflies

Page 7: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Does the resident always win?

Page 8: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Does the resident always win?

Page 9: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective
Page 10: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

The role of motivation

Christer Wiklund

Bergman, Olofsson & Wiklund (2010) Contest outcome in a territorial butterfly

Page 11: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Polymorphism and morph determination

Papilio dardanus

model mimicPapilio dardanus

model

model

mimic

mimic

Papilio dardanus

Batesian mimicry

Page 12: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Polymorphism

The Dobzhansky - Cain & Sheppard - Fisher polymorphism debate

Dobzhansky (1951) Genetics and the origin of species

Genetic polymorphism as such is frequently adaptive Theo. Dobzhansky

Cain & Sheppard (1954) The theory of adaptive polymorphism

"This interesting theory may be correct, but it is not clear what is meant by one population being more highly adapted than another to a particular environment"

Arthur Cain

A precursor of the group selection debate

Page 13: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Fisher concluded the debate

Dobzhansky is right, but the idea traces back to "a little-known book of nearly a hundred years ago, called The Origin of Species"

Fisher regarded polymorphism as an adaptive strategy

"one way of making this intelligible is by the analogyof games of skill, or to speak somewhat more pretentiously, of the Theory of Games"

Fisher (1958) Polymorphism and natural selection

"I would not have alluded to this storm in a tea-cup, but for the circumstance that I mean to put forward some ideas on this problem of the possible adaptive value of polymorphisms"

The “Darwin joke”

Page 14: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Phenotype determination

Schwander & Leimar (unpubl.)

Page 15: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Phenotype determination

Schwander & Leimar (unpubl.)

Page 16: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Sex determinationBulmer & Bull (1982). Models of polygenic sex determination and sex ratio control

Ouachita map turtle Baby

Page 17: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Sex determination

Van Dooren & Leimar (2003). The evolution of environmental and genetic sex determination in fluctuating environments.

Page 18: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Mechanisms of sex determination

Quinn et al. (2007). Temperature sex reversal implies sex gene dosage in a reptile.

Central bearded dragon lizard

Page 19: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Climate-driven population divergence in sex-determining systems

Pen et al. (2007)

Snow skink

Page 20: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Five rules for the evolution of cooperation

Nowak (2006)

Page 21: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective
Page 22: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

From a biologist’s perspective some things are missing

• Biological markets

• Sanctions and partner choice

• By-product benefits

• Pseudoreciprocity

• Common interest

Leimar & Hammerstein (2010). Cooperation for direct fitness benefits.

Page 23: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective
Page 24: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Sanctions in legume rhizobium mutualism

Bacteria fix atmospheric nitrogen inside root nodules of leguminous plants

Page 25: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

What if the bacteria do not fix nitrogen?

Experiments suggest that the plant then re-allocates its resources (Kiers et al. 2003)

Recent work claims that the role of sanctionsis small (Marco et al. 2009)

CommentSanctions are best understood as a by-product of an action that is of direct interest to the actor

Page 26: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Cleaning mutualism: by-product benefits

There are immediate benefits (food and removal of ectoparasites) for the partners

Page 27: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Ant-lycaenid mutualism: pseudoreciprocity

Lycaenid larvae invest in sweet secretion – ants forage and protect their food resource

Page 28: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Mycorrhizae: exchange of organic carbon and mineral nutrients between plants and fungi

Page 29: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Could it work like human trading and exchange?

Page 30: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Mutual investments in by-product benefits

Leimar & Connor (2003) Bever et al (2009)

Page 31: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Evolution of common interest

Contributing factors

• Cost of changing partners, resulting in partner fidelity

• Increased dependence on partners

Page 32: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

Acacia plant housing mutualistic ants Extrafloral nectar is offered

Page 33: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective

The extrafloral nectar

• contains glucose and fructose

• is virtually void of sucrose

Ants of the genus Pseudomyrmex

• have lost the capacity to digest sucrose

• depend on this nectar (Kautz et al. 2009)

Possible evolution of increased dependence as a by-product of the advantage of being less attractive to non-mutualistic ants

Page 34: Olof Leimar, Department of Zoology, Stockholm University Biology and game theory Where are we now and how did we come here? A biologist’s perspective