The evolution of conditional dispersal promotes cooperation
- Date
- September 25 (Thu) 13:00 - 14:00, 2025 (JST)
- Speaker
-
- Iris Prigent (Ph.D. Student, Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, Switzerland)
- Language
- English
- Host
- Thomas Hitchcock
Kin selection is an important mechanism for the evolution of cooperative behaviours across multiple taxa. While limited dispersal can foster kin selection by generating a genetic correlation between cooperating individuals, it also increases competition among relatives, constraining the evolution of cooperation. Prior theory has explored the co-evolution of dispersal and cooperation but typically assumes dispersal is independent of social cues. Here, we use mathematical modelling to examine whether socially-mediated dispersal, whereby individuals adjust their dispersal based on social context, can mitigate kin competition and thus enhance cooperation. We model the joint evolution of: (i) the probability of cooperating within social groups; and (ii) the probability of dispersing conditional on the number of individuals that have cooperated within the group, leading to a reaction norm for dispersal. We show that when the probability of dispersal increases with the number of cooperators, cooperation is favoured because it increases the fitness of relatives. The joint evolution of the two traits can lead to the differentiation of two types of individuals, one that always cooperates and another that never does. Although both types evolve dispersal norms such that they disperse more often when there are more cooperators in the group, cooperators evolve a steeper norm, reflecting greater sensitivity to their social environment. Our study shows that dispersal responses to the environment can vary between individuals based on their own social tendency, which can help explain why dispersal proclivities may differ between genotypes and between environments within a single population.
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