4.7 Article

Eusociality through conflict dissolution

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.0386

关键词

major transitions; evolution of eusociality; kin selection; parental manipulation; parent-offspring conflict; evolutionary dynamics

资金

  1. St Andrews' School of Biology
  2. French National Research Agency (ANR) [ANR-17-EURE-0010]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Mothers in eusocial species can induce offspring to help through hormones, pheromones, or behavioral displays, with offspring often helping voluntarily. The converted helping hypothesis suggests that maternal manipulation of assistance can eventually lead to voluntary help, resolving parent-offspring conflict. This mechanism results in reproductive division of labor, increased queen fertility, and honest queen signaling to suppress worker reproduction, recovering diverse features of eusociality.
Eusociality, where largely unreproductive offspring help their mothers reproduce, is a major form of social organization. An increasingly documented feature of eusociality is that mothers induce their offspring to help by means of hormones, pheromones or behavioural displays, with evidence often indicating that offspring help voluntarily. The co-occurrence of maternal influence and offspring voluntary help may be explained by what we call the converted helping hypothesis, whereby maternally manipulated helping subsequently becomes voluntary. Such hypothesis requires that parent-offspring conflict is eventually dissolved-for instance, if the benefit of helping increases sufficiently over evolutionary time. We show that help provided by maternally manipulated offspring can enable the mother to sufficiently increase her fertility to transform parent-offspring conflict into parent-offspring agreement. This conflict-dissolution mechanism requires that helpers alleviate maternal life-history trade-offs, and results in reproductive division of labour, high queen fertility and honest queen signalling suppressing worker reproduction-thus exceptionally recovering diverse features of eusociality. As such trade-off alleviation seemingly holds widely across eusocial taxa, this mechanism offers a potentially general explanation for the origin of eusociality, the prevalence of maternal influence, and the offspring's willingness to help. Overall, our results explain how a major evolutionary transition can happen from ancestral conflict.

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