Document Type
Article
Keywords
: bacteriocin, greenbeard, harming, kin selection, relatedness, social evolution
Abstract
Scale of competition has been shown to be an important factor in shaping the evolution of social interactions. Although many theoretical and experimental studies have examined its effect on altruistic cooperation, relatively little research effort has been focused on spiteful behaviors—actions that harm both the actor and the recipient. In this study, we expand on existing theory by investigating the importance of the global frequency of spiteful alleles, and we determine experimentally how the scale of competition affects selection for spite in the bacterial pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa under high and intermediate spatial relatedness. Consistent with our theoretical results, we found in our experiments that spiteful genotypes are more favored under local (rather than global) competition and intermediate (rather than high) spatial relatedness, conditions that have been shown to select against indiscriminate altruism.
Publication Date
August 2011
Publication Title
The American Naturalist
Volume
178
Issue
2
First Page
276
Last Page
285
DOI
10.1086/660827
Recommended Citation
Inglis, R.; Roberts, Patrick; Gardner, Andy; and Buckling, Angus, "Spite and the Scale of Competition in Pseudomonas Aeruginosa" (2011). Biology Department Faculty Works. 78.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/660827
Available at:
https://irl.umsl.edu/biology-faculty/78
Comments
© 2011 by Inglis