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Weak and strong altruism in traitgGroups: Reproductive suicide, personal fitness and expected value

Gregory B. Pollock and Antonio Cabrales

Economics Working Papers from Department of Economics and Business, Universitat Pompeu Fabra

Abstract: A simple variant of trait group selection, employing predators as the mechanism underlying group selection, supports contingent reproductive suicide as altruism (i.e., behavior lowering personal fitness while augmenting that of another) without kin assortment. The contingent suicidal type may either saturate the population or be polymorphic with a type avoiding suicide, depending on parameters. In addition to contingent suicide, this randomly assorting morph may also exhibit continuously expressed strong altruism (sensu Wilson 1979) usually thought restricted to kin selection. The model will not, however, support a sterile worker caste as such, where sterility occurs before life history events associated with effective altruism; reproductive suicide must remain fundamentally contingent (facultative sensu West Eberhard 1987; Myles 1988) under random assortment. The continuously expressed strong altruism supported by the model may be reinterpreted as probability of arbitrarily committing reproductive suicide, without benefit for another; such arbitrary suicide (a "load" on "adaptive" suicide) is viable only under a more restricted parameter space relative to the necessarily concomitant adaptive contingent suicide.

Keywords: Altruism; personal fitness; predation; reproductive suicide; trait group selection (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: C70 Z00 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1998-09
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-mic
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