Showing posts with label Behavioral Ecology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Behavioral Ecology. Show all posts

Thursday, September 19, 2019

My amazon.com comments on Eisenberg JF (1981)...Mammal "radiations" (Clara B. Jones)

My amazon.com comments on Eisenberg JF (1981)...Mammal "radiations"...

The mammalogist, John F. Eisenberg's, oeuvre remains one of the most highly respected and important in his field. Because most of his research investigated Neotropical mammals, rather than mammals of the Old World, his is not a household name. Because of my own specializations, in this brief review, I limit my comments to Eisenberg's treatments of mammal Behavior and Social Organization [group-living, interindividual interactions, cooperation, and altruism]. With E.O. Wilson's 1975 important chapter on patterns of sociality in Class: Mammalia ["The secret to the evolution of sociality in mammals is milk."], Eisenberg's "radiations" is the first attempt to identify PATTERNS of Behavior & Social Biology across all group-living mammals for which there was data by 1981. No subsequent treatment has attempted successfully to summarize the social biology of mammals comparable to Wilson's 1971 treatment of Social Insects [necessary reading for Behavioral Ecologists & Social Biologists] or Holldobler & Wilson's 1990 treatment of the Ants. Though Tim Clutton-Brock recently published a book [2016]  titled Mammal Societies [sic], it stands as a highly selective literature review, rather than a synthesis. The limited and highly selective chapter by Smith et al. in Rubenstein & Abbott's 2017 Comparative Social Evolution omits Primates and posits bats as the Order needing research as a model for the evolution of sociality in mammals [a view, possibly, derived from Wilson, 1975's discussion of bats]. To the contrary, bats are a highly derived group not suited for a model of general patterns. Rodents are the taxon of choice, including large-bodied and small-bodied groups, sexually-segregated ["solitary"] to highly social species [including the social mole-rats], and taxa with generalized as well as specialized phenotypes--living across virtually all ecotones, and with a commensal relation to humans--that will be most helpful in the early phases of identifying common features across mammals, as well, possibly, across vertebrates. Additionally, critical to any scientific treatment, and as Eisenberg points out in "radiations," the marsupials are the only group of mammals that can serve as a "control group" for tests of hypotheses and apparent patterns [see comments on this idea in Wilson '75]. My 2014 book, The evolution of mammalian sociality in an ecological perspective, is synthetic, emphasizes Ecology, but is brief. The Class is sorely in need of a synthesis across taxa for which data are available; unfortunately, behavior & sociality of rodents are not well known [but, see, Wolff & Sherman's 2007 volume, Rodent Societies]. Wilson, 1971, 1975, are critical for the standardization of terminology, as well as, factors critical to the study of Social Biology and patterns of group life [e.g., the evolution of Communication, "polyethism"], and Robert Trivers', Social Evolution, as well as, James Costs's, The other social insects, should be consulted. Critically, as a few mammalogists have pointed out [e.g., Bob Selander], initial attempts to synthesize patterns across group-living mammals should begin with analyses that study large and small mammals separately. Finally, we want to assess the observation that the structure of mammal [vertebrate?] groups results from the tendency of females to select rich patches of food and that of males to select the largest relative aggregation[s] of females. Other patterns are identifiable in existing literature. Since the time of John Hurrell Crook [Behavior Monograph X], we know that patterns of group organization depend upon the distribution and abundance [dispersion]  of limiting resources [e.g,, food, mates, sleeping sites]. Also, related to this overview, females are, cet. par., "energy maximizers;" males, "time-minimizers."

General Mammalian Patterns, esp., Patterns of Group-living Species [compiled by Clara B. Jones]

General Mammalian Patterns [?--in no particular order] with an emphasis on Group-living taxa, especially, Social Biology & Behavioral Ecology--also see Twitter @cbjones1943... Conceptual Framework... 

FIRST PRINCIPLES OF BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY:: E[nergy]: Acquisition->Consumption->Allocation====> Worker &/or Reproductive &/or Dependent...(Males, T[ime] Minimizers; Females, E[nergy] Maximizers)


Mammals: Anisogamy-->Sexually-Antagonistic Selection-->Sexual Conflict-->Differential T-E investment, including, Life History (males, time-minimizers; females, energy-maximizers)-->Sexual Dimorphism, inc, Body Size...constrained by dispersion of limiting resources [especially, food for females, mates for males]--that may or may not not favor group-living...[apply, for example, to evolution of male Alternative Reproductive Behaviors (ARBs) & female "counterstrategies"]...


For analysis, and where data permit, we will separate comments for large [>100 kg] & small mammals--as suggested in literature, e.g., https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/3281/ad106c0d6a9fdc831b7725dc5d3460222136.pdf

Terminology & Context: Terminology in the field of Social Biology, here, related to Social Evolution, is not standardized ... for example, WD Hamilton & Stu A. West, define "social" in different ways, the former limiting use of "social" to Cooperation & Altrusim, the two [of four] categories of behavior [Selfish, Cooperation, Altruism, Spite] in which Recipient gains "fitness" benefits ... West, on the other hand, defines "social" as any interindividual interaction where either or both interactants benefit reproductively ... recall that "interdependence" is a necessary precursor to Cooperation, while Cooperation is a necessary precursor to the evolution of Complex Sociality ... here, I am thinking of Cooperation as per Hamilton--an interindividual interaction in which both interactants benefit in "fitness"  ... related to the Major Transitions Approach, Complex Sociality [division-of-labor (cooperation between specialists); task, role, &/or morphological specialization] is, particularly, problematic, it seems to me ... if we view specialization along a continuum, say, from feeding specialization to DoL to reproductive DoL with "totipotent" workers or "helpers" to reproductive DoL with more or less "sterile castes" [social insect workers], do we accept the typical usage whereby Advanced Eusocial taxa are the most "complex" societies [the "pinnacle" of sociality as per Wilson (1971)]? ... though many Social Scientists would claim that interindividual interactions in humans represent the "pinnacle" of Complex Sociality, expert consensus among Social Biologists (e.g., B Crespi 2014) have concluded that humans cannot be classified, Eusocial, because this species does not display "reproductive division-of-labor" ... it is worth pointing out that the wide variety of human reproductive groups have not been systematically described, classified, or diagnosed, including, analysis of populations in which more than one architecture is found, such as all modern nation-states [e.g., monogamy, polygamy, promiscuity, etc.] ... whether & how & why these various conformations interact over Time & Space remains to be determined ... it is assumed that 1st Principles [T, E, acquisition, consumption, allocation] relative to abiotic [e.g., climate] & biotic [e.g., food dispersion; breeding sites] environmental regimes, as well as, constraints of limiting resources, as well as, species-typical female traits, always apply ...


1... most Mammals are "sexually segregated" [sometimes termed, "solitary" in the literature]; however, aggregations [temporary clumping of animals] may occur around clumped, limiting resources, especially, food [as, white-tailed deer may do in Spring when food is abundant & clumped]; other aggregations may form when animals migrate from one feeding &/or breeding ground to another; the term "herds" often refers to an aggregation ... the term, "group," is reserved for a reproductive unit ... Hamilton's Rule [rb - c>0 ----> rb > c] is widely accepted as a general formulation of Social Evolution ... according to Hamilton (1964), "social" behavior is limited to Cooperation & Altruism--the only conformations of interindividual interactions [Selfish, Cooperation, Altruism, Spite] whereby Recipient gains in "fitness" ... this definition of "social" should be derivable from Hamilton's equations ...



2... Several authors have claimed that large mammals have, cet. par., generalized phenotypes (e.g., Eisenberg 1981), presumably, related to evolution in heterogeneous regimes ["environmental grain" theory proposed by Richard Levins 1968. Wilson '75 posits that [1] phenotypic flexibility/plasticity is a general feature of social evolution of large mammals [n.b., the evolution of "learning" should be discussed here, including, the evolution of "social" learning requisite to Culture]; however, generalized phenotypes may represent [2] "canalization." Whether [1] or [2] is an effect of temporal variability & "grain" will depend upon patterns of variability [e.g., rainfall, hurricanes] relative to Generation Time [Is the environment trackable?] . For all of the topics in #2, you might want to take a look at my 2012 Springer Brief. Furthermore, to the extent that mammals exhibit generalized phenotypes, this trait would be expected to inhibit evolution of specialized morphologies, such as, morphologically distinct castes. See sections on generalized phenotypes in Eisenberg (1981).

3... Mammalian phenotypes are usually generalized [see Eisenberg op. cit.] ... the evolution of Complex Sociality requires Specialization [division-of-labor; task, role, &/or morphological specialization]; Interdependence [among interacting group members] is a necessary precursor to the evolution of Cooperation ... since Cooperation is a necessary precursor to the evolution of Complex Sociality, specialization must evolve at some point during the Cooperation "grade" ... Hamilton (op. cit.) classifies "cooperation" as an interaction in which both Actor & Recipient benefit reproductively ... as a significant aside, in taxonomic studies, "specialization" is used to diagnose "primitive"/"ancestral" from "derived"/recent characters, where "specialization" is a criterion for "derived" classification ...

4... depending upon environmental regime, an advantage of a generalized phenotype is promotion of phenotypic flexibility [reversible response] &/or phenotypic plasticity [irreversible response]--responses that are usually condition-, context-, situation-dependent ... in extreme &/or highly time-varying environments, responses may be "decided" statistically or probabilistically, even under Hamilton's Rule [op. cit.; often termed "kin selection"] ... it is worth pointing out that a] Hamilton's Rule [rb - c >0 ----> rb>c] does not predict that it is always beneficial to assist the reproduction of kin] the evolution of sociality does not necessarily require individual recognition, e.g., "greenbeards" may operate or "decisions" may be based on probabilities or likelihoods ...

5... the observation that most mammalian phenotypes are generalized is usually attributed to evolution in time-varying environments ... because most mammalian phenotypes are generalized & because Complex Sociality requires the evolution of specialization, it is expected that Complex Sociality, &, possibly, Cooperation, would be uncommon in the Class & in other taxa with generalized phenotypes ... except for cooperatively-breeding mammals & the [eu]social mole rats, [reproductive] division-of-labor [cooperation between specialists] has not been described to date in mammals; task, role, & morphological specialization are described so far only for the social [eusocial] mole rats ... several other species of mammals are potential candidates for specialization [see David Macdonald's edited reviews of Mammal Orders ... in humans, whose phenotypes are generalized in the mammalian mode, the evolution of learning mechanisms permits [learned] specializations such as division-of-labor and task, role specialization ... learning may have evolved in mammals with generalized phenotypes, in part, to minimize the costs of solitary living and maximize the benefits of group-living ... the question of whether morphological specialization has evolved in humans has not, to my knowledge, been systematically studied in humans; however, Race [ecotype] may be a candidate for morphological specialization in Homo sapiens ...

6... since most mammals' phenotypes are generalized, the evolution of Complex Sociality [&, possibly, Cooperation] is expected to be severely constrained in the Class ... on the other hand, some mammal species display specialized phenotypes, & many species display both generalized and specialized traits ... selection may favor some characters [e.g., Learning; phenotypic flexibility (reversible) & phenotypic plasticity (irreversible)] because they minimize the costs &/or maximize the benefits of generalization &/or specialization ... thinking in terms of differential costs & benefits [to "fitness"], research has led to the conclusion that specialists are good competitors but vulnerable to extinction while generalists are poor competitors but comparatively less vulnerable to extinction ...



7... Selander & Kaufman (1973) and others [see paper linked in #1 above] argue that large mammals have higher tolerance for genetic monomorphism. 

8... The basis for Social Evolution in mammals is "milk", according to EO Wilson [1975, Sociobiology, Belknap: HUP] n.b. a number of authors claim that the basis for Social Evolution in mammals is the primitively [non-cooperative, non-altruistic] communal female group leading to polygyny [c.f. Wittenberger 1980]. The basis of Wilson's point, however, is that Mammal females are obligate caretakers of young, predisposing them to certain life-history trajectories, including, probably, receiving help, all limited by energetics. Recall the litany that females are "energy-maximizers," males, "time-minimizers." Some female mammals, extend maternal care [&, often, lifespan], a trait that will retard the evolution of "complex" sociality [specialization, eusociality] because extended maternal care prevents the evolution of reduced maternal care and the evolution of the de-coupling of Survival and Fecundity. Importantly, in humans, social insects, & "primitively" eusocial mole-rats [& "cooperatively-breeding" mammals?], an apparently rare life-history strategy is found [among females] whereby extended lifespan [a "slow" life-history trait] is combined with a high reproductive rate [a "fast" life-history trait]. In humans, however, extended lifespan is, apparently, combined with increased investment in maternal care; while, in social insects, social mole-rats, & "cooperatively-breeding" mammals [?],  extended lifespan in associated with reduced maternal care--a necessary, though, not sufficient, condition for the evolution of higher "grades" of sociality [specialization, eusociality, genotypic altruism]. Further, reduced maternal care is a necessary trait associated with decoupling of Survival & Fecundity.

9... According to Wilson (1975, p 379), the four "pinnacles" of social evolution are: the colonial invertebrates [e.g., corals, bryozoans], the social insects, the non-human mammals, & humans]. n.b. reflective of a "major transitions" approach to the Tree of Life

10... Traits of the non-human mammals: aggressiveness & discord carried further in vertebrate, including, mammal, societies than in social insects...selfishness rules inter-individual interactions...no sterile castes [though reproduction may be suppressed chemically or by "choice"]...acts of altruism infrequent and usually directed toward kin, especially, offspring...cooperation usually rudimentary; though inequity & hierarchy virtually ubiquitous [wherever there is division of labor there will be inequity]...by human standards, some acts "brutal" [e.g., treatment of infirm & dying]...mostly after Wilson '75, p 380

11... Human social traits: humans remain "essentially vertebrate" in their social structure, but more "complex," not by reduction of selfishness but by evolution of intelligence and language [relate to phenotypic plasticity; learning, including, social learning (cultural mechanism); social parasitism; persuasion; manipulation; exploitation, etc]...elaboration of kin relations [cost-benefit]...human societies "approach" levels of cooperation in insect societies & far exceed social insect societies in communication...mostly after Wilson '75, p 380

12... Most "interesting" mammal orders: rodents, artiodactyls, primates, marsupials--"control group" for Class after Wilson '75 & Eisenberg '81 [social biology of largest mammal orders--bats, rodents--virtually unknown as of 1975]...mostly after Wilson '75, p 468 x

13... Traits labile [e.g., mode of intrasexual cooperation, degree of cohesion, openness of societies (c.f. "open" vs. "closed" groups)]. Many forms of interaction change seasonally, & patterns differ at species level. [after Wilson '75]

14... Phylogenetically, more primitive living marsupials and insectivores tend to be solitary. Species that forage nocturnally or underground are, also, mainly solitary. Eisenberg [1981] & Wilson [1975] posit that marsupials are the only "control group" we have for Class Mammalia as a whole.

15... As a rule, the most complex social systems within each Order occur in the physically largest numbers...true of marsupials, rodents, ungulates, carnivores, and primates [Why? maybe because diurnal and because of large brains (intelligence?)? Wilson '75 Also, refer to J.H. Crook's work with weaver birds and other work in Behavioral Ecology: need to evaluate dispersion (distribution and abundance in time and space) of limiting resources relative to behavior & social biology].

16... Species adapted to life in open environments more likely to be social. Rodents known to form coteries of mixed sexes are all inhabitants of grasslands. Ungulates--great herds predominantly found in grasslands and on savannas, though herds mostly loosely structured--but see, horses, mountain sheep, elephants, and a few others [zebras?] Wilson '75

17... The structure of mammal [vertebrate?] groups is thought to result from the tendency of females to select rich patches of food and that of males to select large aggregations of females. Because patch richness and the consequent number [and quality] of females [female group size] is expected to vary, the relative reproductive success [RRS] of females may, also, vary over time and space. See the following paper, for example:

http://eprints.uberibz.org/1173/1/jones_2008.pdf

Also, see:

Jones, CB (March, 1996) Relative reproductive success [RRS] in the mantled howler monkey: implications for conservation. Neotropical Primates 4(1), pp 21-23.

18... Chapters on Mammals in Rubenstein & Abbott (2017), may not be very useful for treatments of general patterns of Social Biology in Mammals; however, see stimulating final, summary chapter in this ambitious edited volume.

19. IMO, the chapters in Wilson (1975) on non-human primates and on humans are not very useful for identifying patterns across the Primates, in Homo sapiens, across Mammals [or, across vertebrates].

20... Tim Clutton-Brock's text, Mammal Societies, not very useful for identifying general patterns of Social Biology in Mammals. This book is not a Synthesis for the Mammals in the way that Wilson's [1971], Insect Societies, is a Synthesis for the Social Insects--even though TC-B titles his book, Mammal Societies. This book is a highly selective literature review. See, however, the useful table of contents & #generateideas. re: sub-eusocial insects--their traits & trends--see James Costa's book, The other insect societies which includes many ideas for research.

21... Neotropical social mammals require thorough treatment, review, and integration into the broader literature on mammals which is dominated by research in the Paleotropics. In South America, see, especially, caviomorph rodents [infraorder, Caviomorpha], uniting all So. American hystricognaths. n.b. all or most of these spp. are small-bodied, & they are related to Old World [hystricognath] social mole rats.

22... General Patterns...Gene Evolution...Convergence...Gene E. Robinson Lab [see Jenny Tung's preliminary, though, cutting-edge, work on mammals @jtung5]:

https://www.pnas.org/content/108/18/7472

23... Temporal division of labor [age (-graded) polyethism: Wilson 1971] is ubiquitous in social insects; how common is it in Mammals & other vertebrates? See [especially, tables]: Jones CB (June, 1996) Temporal division of labor in a primate: age-dependent foraging behavior. Neotropical Primates 4(2): 50-53.

also, Wilson EO (1971) The Insect Societies. Belknap [HUP], Cambridge, MA.

24. The following book by Bernie Crespi discusses correlates of sociality [p 66, pp 73-74]...note, especially, significance of "high value" of limiting resources [abode, mates, food, etc.]...again, shows need to study limiting resource dispersion [distribution & abundance in time & space]...

Crespi BJ, Morris DC, Mound LA (2004) Evolution of ecological and behavioural diversity: Australian Acacia thrips as model organisms. Australian Biological Resources Study, Canberra.

https://www.environment.gov.au/science/abrs/publications/thrips

25... How much of the variation in mammal behavior & social biology is explained by body size?

26. Nursing [mammary glands] predisposes mammal females to caretaking, dependency, subordinate [e.g., "helper"] status, & favoritism of kin &/or other females. But how are these adaptations affected by evolution in suboptimal ["poor"] conditions or conditions of intense competition [for limiting resources], or, say, drought or collapse of prey population?

27. See Part 4 of Eisenberg [1981] for discussion [also, tables] of mammalian behavior, including mating systems & social biology--see, especially, Chapters 31-33.. Eisenberg [1981] classifies mammal "mating systems" into 10 categories, reduced to 3 basic types: polygyny [1 male, >1 females]; polyandry [multiple-male : multiple female], in which females mate with >1 male [not necessarily "promiscuous", i.e., females may demonstrate selectivity or preferences; also, there may be "favoritism" in which an adult female & an adult male are likely to mate exclusively or commonly with each other]; monogamy [uncommon] 

See Eisenberg's outdated but still interesting and classic paper, Eisenberg JF (1966) The social organizations of mammals, Handbuch der Zoologie, Band 8. Lieferung 39: 10(7): 1-92.

28... Feldhamer GA, Drickamer LC, Vessey SH, Merritt JF, Krajewski C (2007) Mammalogy. Johns Hopkins UP, MD: "typical mammalian pattern of preferring unrelated distant kin as mates;" Emlen's "ecological constraints" model + Trivers' reciprocity [+ "pay to stay"?] explain "helping" in mammals?--especially, patterns in social mole rats [do naked mole rats have castes since there is a specialized "disperser form" in this species?]...see Jarman [1974] for classification of mammalian social organization x feeding selectivity: least selective most gregarious, large, polygamous, & sexually dimorphic--Jarmon PJ [1974] The social organization of antelope in relation to their ecology. Behaviour 48: 215-267...need to integrate Jarmon's findings with those of Crook [1964, Behaviour Monograph X] on weaver birds, i.e. relationship between food dispersion [distribution & abundance] and social structure/organization...

29... Ricklefs RE, Miller GL [2000] Ecology, 4th Edition. W.H. Freeman & Co., NY: Part 4, Population Ecology, Section 4.2, The dispersion of individuals reflects habitat heterogeneity and social interactions--"The dispersion of individuals within a population describes their spacing with respect to one another."--clumped [aggregation (maybe poor choice of word)]--clumped [limiting] resources may be most common determinant of these patterns, also, tendency of offspring to remain in natal group --see #13 above; spaced [even spacing= hyperdispersion]; random ["In the absence of social antagonism, which results in a spaced dispersion pattern or mutual attraction, which leads to clumping, individuals may distribute themselves at random" Can use Poisson methods to evaluate dispersion patterns...also, see Index of Dispersion [Clark & Evans, 1954]...also, can evaluate "nearest-neighbor distance"--"interindividual distance" [IID] in primatology literature...again, see Crook, 1964, Behavior Monograph X...

30... When discussing patterns of grouping or "social" organization [in populations], I have the strong impression that Mammalogists tend to attribute the patterns to phylogeny, philopatry [patterns of dispersal x sex], and/or predation...a Crookian [Behavioral Ecology] framework seems not to influenced Mammalogy very much where a "Crookian framework" would entail the mapping of animals in a population on to the dispersion of limiting resources [distribution and abundance of limiting resources in time and space--ceteris paribus & on average relative to differential engergetics x sex--males, at least, adult males, expected to be "time-minimizers," females, at least, adult females, "energy-maximizers"]...

31... The (2007) edited volume on Rodents by Wolff & Sherman [link] should be read in association with John F. Eisenberg's 1981 book on mammalian "radiations" [op. cit.]...Eisenberg provides broad context for many topics [e.g., parental behavior, scent marking, infanticide]...

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=wolff+rodents&i=stripbooks&ref=nb_sb_noss

32... General patterns in Social Mammals [Social Vertebrates? Social Animals?]: EO Wilson [Insect Societies, Belknap (Harvard), 1971] discussed "age polyethism" ["temporal division-of-labor": TDL; "primitive" (totipotent) eusociality] in social insects as a feature of eusociality, particularly, "primitive" eusociality [taxa displaying "totipotency," the capacity to switch from a reproductive to a non-reproductive state & vice versa, as opposed to "advanced" eusociality, taxa characterized by sterile castes]...this article* provides the first empirical evidence of temporal division-of-labor in a mammal [1996], the mantled howler monkey, Alouatta palliata Gray, studied by the present author in Canas, Guanacaste, Costa Rica. Temporal division-of-labor ["age polyethism," "primitive" (totipotent) eusociality] may occur widely among social mammals, social vertebrates, and, possibly, all social animals, where Cooperation and/or Altruism [including, reciprocity] have evolved in group-structured populations...i would speculate that TDL ["age polyethism;" "primitive" (totipotent) eusociality] is more energetically efficient than more opportunistic, and, perhaps, more flexible or plastic, modes of [social] behavioral expression & might be expected to evolve/occur in contexts favoring conservation of energy [e.g., in heterogeneous regimes]...since females are expected to be "energy maximizers" [metabolically, reproductively], TDL may be more likely to be observed in females compared to males ["time-minimizers"]...TDL is expected to be developmentally programmed [within some (statistically normal) species-typical, population-typical, range (x sex)], & conscious & aware processes may not be required for its generation...in ////?, Jones reported age-dependent expressions of conflict-resolution among adult males of the same Alouatta species in the same location & group; these results require intense investigation, lab & field experiments, & modeling, including, for humans...it is important to investigate those conditions under which different energy-conservation strategies evolve x sex...since males are expected to be more robust under energy constraints, it seems likely that thresholds will be identified differentially x sex for the same endogenous and exogenous, including, social, stimuli/factors/conditions.

EO Wilson's 2019 book, Genesis, advances the idea that many [social] Mammals, including, humans [ see**], may be "eusocial." Where "temporal division-of-labor" ["age polyethism"] is demonstrated, taxa can be classified, "primitively eusocial" and/or Totipotent Eusocial [TE] this classification would apply, also, to any other Social Vertebrates or, indeed, to any other Social Animals, where "age polyethism" [TDL; "primitive" eusocial; TE] is identified. If "tradeoffs" [e.g., energetic, reproductive, survival] are most likely to be observed in "poor" conditions [e.g., heterogeneous regimes where "fitness" is compromised; recurrent drought, unpredictable food or water supply], "age polyethism" may evolve to minimize energetic costs in time and space. While females are expected to be most sensitive to energetic effects, males, also, may benefit, under some conditions, from age-dependent responses. Furthermore, there  may be energetic [reproductive, survival] benefits in coordinating many maturational [age-dependent] and developmental [age-dependent] milestones or markers with one another as genetic and physiological energy-savings tactics and strategies.

33... Wolff & Sherman (2007, link) includes some interesting & useful chapters, though, terminology is not standardized [& is often confusing (e.g., "single-breeding," "multiple-breeding"--particularly, as they are discussed in relation to philopatry...see, for example, Chapter 21 by Lacey & Sherman, who needed to make Emlen's work on Ecological Constraints fundamental to their discussion of "philopatry")], and "species" is often employed where "population" is, rather, the correct term. Each chapter in this book has a Summary at the end that can be read before digging into the whole chapter. Some chapters in Sections, "Introduction," "Social Behavior," & "Comparative Sociality" are of particular interest to students of Behavioral Ecology & Social Biology. There are many allusions to the importance of environmental [exogenous] factors, including, dispersion of resources; however, there is no explicit integration of [John Hurrel] Crookian socioecology [Behavior Monograph X] nor is there integration of Emlen's Ecological Constraints model which is fundamental when combined with Crookian socioecology. For context & references (especially, Emlen, Crespi), see blogpost, this blog, of EO Wilson's, Genesis.

Wolff & Sherman [2007], amazon.com:

https://www.amazon.com/Rodent-Societies-Ecological-Evolutionary-Perspective/dp/0226905365/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=jerry+wolff+rodents&qid=1580071530&s=books&sr=1-1

EO Wilson Genesis review [blogpost, this blog]:***

http://vertebratesocialbehavior.blogspot.com/2019/04/review-of-eo-wilsons-new-book-genesis.html

34... Fundamental questions in Behavioral Ecology pertain to Population Structure relative to dispersion [distribution & abundance] of limiting resources in T(ime) & S(pace), also to Population Structure relative to Basic Laws of Ecology--Acquisition, Consumption, Allocation. Ultimately, we should be able to reduce "fundamental questions" to Thermal Biology [all Biology reduces to Heat], & all material phenomena reduceable to Physics----->expressible in mathematical terms.

31. Towards general principles [GUTs] via studies of Biological Assembly...for group-living---->sociality, see literature in Physics on "queuing"...

... reintegratingbiology.org/wp-content/upl

...as "assembly" patterns & rules are investigated and identified, it is important to address the Physics literature on "queuing" [see my 2014 Springer Brief on mammalian social evolution, Chapter 4]...

...as "assembly" patterns & rules are investigated and identified, it is important not to ignore Thermal Biology pertaining to Social Biology...

35... Needs lots of research: Resource Partitioning in Group-living vertebrates--search for patterns search for rules [within & between trophic levels, including, differential focus on "frugivores," "carnivores," "omnivores," etc.]

36. Mammalian Patterns [here, Rodents]: Chapter 3 in #Rodent Societies [Jerry Wolff & Paul Sherman, Eds, U of Chicago Press, 2007] concludes that most rodents are polygynous or promiscuous [the author prefers the latter]...the litany for #Mammals is that most mammals are polygynous...

37... Mammalian Patterns, Ch. 4 on female reproductive strategies in Wolff & Sherman, op. cit. does not identify general patterns but exposes several problems inherent to the literature on mammalian sexual selection in this book & in many other treatments [e.g., Mammal Societies by TCB, op. cit.]...for example: 1...the reason treatments of male reproductive strategies dominate the literature is that females are a LIMITING resource for males; males are not a limiting resource for females [------>selection]; 2...many treatments, such as this chapter, do not integrate optimality language and logic into their analyses; 3...many/most treatments are not derived from Crookian model of Behavioral Ecology/Social Biology [dispersion [distribution & abundance] of limiting resources [food, mates, sleeping sites, etc.] in Time & Space; 4...many treatments do not integrate Hamilton's Rule & logic into their analyses; 5...many treatments, especially, in Primatology/Anthropology, do not consider the various hypotheses advanced in an attempt to explain Multiple-Mating by Females [in many reports, only Hrdy's idea is advanced and/or the hypothesis that females mate multiply in order to diversify the genetic composition of litters]; 6...Trivers' 1972 chapter in Campbell's volume seems not to have been digested in many treatments of female reproductive strategies [e.g., mammal females, after parturition and after some threshold investment in "current" offspring, are understood to begin investment in future offspring (e.g., repair, mate choice, fertilization, gestation, etc.)]; this generalization may need to be and has been modified for older/old females; 7...females are, cet. par., "energy-maximizers"; males, "time-minimizers"...

38... this is a classic chapter by Jerry Wolff on alternative reproductive strategies in non-primate mammals...

https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/alternative-reproductive-tactics/alternative-reproductive-tactics-in-nonprimate-male-mammals/88AB2B7352642314032233C426A4A231

39.... following Chapter 7, by John L. Koprowski, in Wolff & Sherman...: "Conflict, both intersexual and intrasexual, has been remarkably influential in the evolution of mating systems of tree squirrels. Conflict among males appears to have been particularly important in promoting evasive behavior in females, led to reduced copulatory duration, promoted alternative reproductive tactics, and influenced postcopulatory tactics for minimizing multiple paternity. Conflict among the sexes likely acts to diminish reproductive success of any dominant individual male, as females mate with multiple males and often avoid active pursuit males. The reproductive skew among males, however, is substantial, and active pursuit males clearly are most successful. Intersexual conflict appears to increase the number of males that are able to mate due directly to the evasive behavior of females, a behavior that maintains the satellite tactic among males. The benefits to females of manipulating the types of competition remain unclear. Future research must quantify the costs and benefits of male and female tactics under different environmental and social conditions...." [95]

40... Gene E. Robinson and other researchers have pointed out that, in social insects, "coordination and control" is decentralized, while, in [most?] human societies, "coordination and control" is centralized...is C & C in [most?] Mammal societies [i.e., in most group-living Mammals], centralized? ... my initial impression based upon my knowledge of all mammalian Orders is that centralized group structure is not common ... dominance hierarchies, for example, would be characterized as a type of "Interdependence," a necessary precursor to social behavior [Cooperation] ... thus, perhaps, the evolution of centralized group architecture is evolutionarily "derived" ...

41... In Wolff & Sherman [op. cit.], Chapter Eight by Dobson & Oli, [using PCA] body mass & phylogeny explain most of the variation in life-history traits [age at maturity; age at last reproduction; juvenile & adult survival; fecundity]...these traits predict a species' position on the "fast-slow [life-history] continuum...should this dataset, also, be analyzed by body size separately--"small" Mammals vs "large" Mammals [unless i am mistaken, a "small" Mammal is considered one < 100 lbs]...

42... in the final analysis, is the most important reason to study Primates the fact that such a large proportion of species is group-living ["social"]--structured around philopatric females, often kin?

43... In Wolff & Sherman [op. cit.], Chapter 13 by Scott Nunes, "dispersal and philopatry" is discussed: "The dispersal process can be categorized as either natal or post-breeding.... In mammals, natal dispersal is more common than breeding dispersal, occurring in nearly all species. Natal dispersal has a strong sex-bias in mammals, with males typically emigrating in new home areas at higher rates or over greater distances than females." [150] "A variety of hypotheses have [sic] been proposes to explain the prevalence of female philopatry in rodents and other mammals.... The evolution of complex social systems among rodents and mammals in general has been suggested to be predicated upon philopatry and cooperation among kin living near each other [especially, philopatric females, often kin]." [162]

44... though authors may mention environmental or ecological factors, in general, few, if any, of the chapters in Wolff & Sherman integrate a Crookian model into their analyses [dispersion (distribution and abundance) of limiting resources in Time & Space]--but see Section, Comparative Socioecology, Chapters 29-37...these excellent and important chapters address Families, Genera, & Species that could reasonably become model systems for the investigation of general mammalian patterns, Behavioral Ecology, & Social Biology [Rattus & Mus are already model systems in research Biology and Medicine]...taxa covered are: ground squirrels; marmots; semifossorial desert rodents; Rattus & Mus; Capybaras and Maras; Octodontid & Ctenomyid rodents; rock-dwelling rodents; African mole-rats; black-tailed gunnison's & Utah prairie dogs...

See Emlen's "ecological constraints" model:

http://max2.ese.u-psud.fr/epc/conservation/PDFs/HIPE/Emlen1982.pdf

See Greenwood's classic 1980 paper on dispersal in birds & mammals:

https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1981-29692-001

45... Wolff & Sherman Chapter 14: Gene dynamics and social behavior [F. Stephen Dobson] uses "F" statistics [Population Genetics] to investigate population structure, finding that, in many mammals, population structure is a function of dispersion of female kin groups...n.b. "social breeding groups may slow the loss of genetic diversity from populations," a process adding to the list of benefits to group-living and, possibly, sociality [cooperation, altruism]...indeed, cooperation & altruism may evolve to insure or enhance these benefits [but what are the tradeoffs, the costs?]...though Anthropologists generally maintain that human sociality evolves from an ancestral state of monogamy, the evidence from Mammals summarized in this blogpost strongly suggests that the ancestral state is the female group, especially, the female kin group, responding to clumped, limiting resources [in heterogeneous regimes?]--as most treatments by mammalogists hold...polygyny [and/or promiscuity?] appear to be the most common mammalian sociosexual system, &, perhaps, as suggested by many researchers, males, in part, monopolize female groups to defend females & their limiting resources [saving energy for female "energy-maximizers"]...as an aside, what role dies Sexual Selection play in all of this...

46... is eusociality much more common than we generally think? Bernie Crespi, WD Hamilton, Nancy Moran quoted in this NY Times article linked below...note importance of protected, reliable food source[s] and of protective, reliable housing [& protection from predators--see Bernie Crespi article linked below]...how about humans?; i have suggested that humans are "facultatively eusocial" in my brief communication, "Are humans cooperative breeders" in Archives of Sexual Behavior discussed on this blog and linked below...

https://www.nytimes.com/1993/02/16/science/social-castes-found-to-be-not-so-rare-in-nature.html

"Are humans cooperative breeders: a call for research" (2011), CB Jones:

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10508-011-9741-5?shared-article-renderer

...thre conditions for the evolution of eusociality, Bernie Crespi [Are these general?]:

https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Three-conditions-for-the-evolution-of-eusociality%3A-Crespi/feb94b7e861ac0e14b8d575f39e33c0a28338419

47... when we speak of "generality" we are often speaking of Convergence--whatever our level[s] of analysis from gene/allele to whole organism...here is link to a now classic paper from Gene E. Robinson's lab; note generalizeability, convergent evolution, & "toolkit" concept...see Table 3.1 in my 2014 Springer brief--phylogenetic & convergent social features of "prehistoric" mammals...

https://www.pnas.org/content/108/18/7472


----------------------------------
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http://vertebratesocialbehavior.blogspot.com/2020/01/age-polyethism-temporal-division-of.html

**
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10508-011-9741-5?shared-article-renderer

***
http://vertebratesocialbehavior.blogspot.com/2019/04/review-of-eo-wilsons-new-book-genesis.html




Thursday, April 11, 2019

Review of Tim Clutton-Brock's, Mammal Societies (by Clara B. Jones, 2016)

Mammal Societies
Tim Clutton-Brock
2016
Wiley-Blackwell (Oxford, UK)
744 pp
ISBN 97811119095323


“The key to the sociobiology of mammals is milk.” E.O. Wilson (1975)

Reviewed by Clara B. Jones (2016; revised 2020)*

Knowledge about group-living mammals may contribute to an understanding of vertebrate social evolution and the evolution of gregariousness in animals with generalized phenotypes [specialization being a signature of high "grades" of social evolution (specialization, reproductive division-of-labor]. Compared to social insects and birds, the social biology of mammals is poorly known with the exception of ungulates, carnivores, and primates (3 of ~25 Orders). Among many similar papers in the mammalian literature on Social Paleontology, in 2011, Ladevèze et al. reported fossil evidence appearing to document mammalian gregariousness and its associated ecology from the basal Tertiary of Bolivia. These findings suggested that extinct, marsupial-like Pucadelphys andinus were group-living, probably exhibiting frequent interactions, strong sexual dimorphism, and male-male competition, as well as, polygyny. Based on the spatial and ecological settings of their specimens, as well as, the climate, in addition to, physical and situational associations and patterning of adult, sub-adult, and juvenile remains in their sample, these authors speculated that the species may have been "social" [gregarious]. In 2012, employing phylogenetic analyses, Briga et al. showed that relatedness and allomaternal¹ care are positively correlated in Class Mammalia. These papers indicate that, though the population dispersion of most extant mammals is sexually segregated (“solitary”) and though fossil remains cannot definitively preserve Behavior, group-living may have a long history in this Class (also see Jones 2014, Table 3.1, pp 19-25).

Tim Clutton-Brock (henceforth, “TC-B”) is a highly-regarded empiricist at the University of Cambridge (UK), recognized, particularly, for his field studies on primates, red deer, and meerkats. He is a prolific scientist with a knack for asking good questions and choosing animal models that have yielded flagship research. The author will be familiar to most animal behaviorists and behavioral ecologists as a specialist of cooperative breeding and evolutionary aspects of reproduction (e.g., female mating strategies, sexual selection). In the book under review, TC-B notes that his undergraduate training was in Anthropology and that he completed his doctorate under Robert Hinde, an animal behaviorist that Psychology typically claims as one of its own. I have been familiar with TC-B's work since the 1970s, and my personal favorites among his copious publications are his 1995 paper with Geoff Parker and the 2003 volume edited with R.M. Sibley & J. Hone. I am pleased to have the opportunity to review Mammal Societies. I have interacted with TC-B on several occasions, once face-to-face, and, more than once, via e-mail. He has always been generous and courteous to me. 

Previous books by JH Crook, “Griff” Ewer, J Eisenberg, EO Wilson, R Estes, D MacDonald, CB Jones, and others, have treated mammalian social biology to one degree or another. Mammal Societies, however, is the first attempt to provide a comprehensive literature review of the topic. The publisher's description of the volume states that it is intended for “behavioral ecologists, ecologists, and anthropologists,” and TC-B self-identifies as a “behavioral ecologist.” The book is, to all purposes, a literature review emphasizing publications on Old World taxa [a tradition attributable, in particular, to Primatology]. While the Table of Contents presents a detailed outline of topics of interest to social biologists, the book is not organized using ecological [e.g., JH Crook] or evolutionary models [e.g., the "major transitions"]. To provide context, professors using Mammal Societies as a course textbook or reference work are strongly advised to acquaint their students early on with Wilson's (1975) treatment (pp 456-574) presenting an explicitly articulated conceptual framework for mammalian social biology, including, trends, conventional terminology, general and comparative features in the Class, an extensive glossary, as well as, case studies and summary tables, figures, and diagrams. John Eisenberg's [1981], "mammalian radiations," is, also, an invaluable source of information on mammalian patterns, including, behavior, as well as, mating & group architectures.

Chapter 1, “Social evolution,” omits definitions of terms the first time they appear in the book (e.g., “aggregation,” “social”, “cooperation”), leading to obfuscation throughout, particularly, since there is no discussion of how to measure social traits (cooperation, altruism) and to discuss their pertinence to reproductive success. In this chapter, the author might have defined “Mammal” and should tell the reader why mammalian social biology is of import. The reader will want to understand possible trajectories to cooperation and altruism from aggregations to group-formation to group-maintenance and how the (spatial and temporal) distribution of limiting resources favor or disfavor the evolution of mammalian sociality. Chapter 1 is, in great part, a selective account of the history of Animal Behavior combined with some mention of theoretical issues (e.g., Darwinism, competition, reciprocity, game theory). However, for rigorous discussions of verbal and quantitative theory in Behavioral Ecology, as well as, overviews of Methods and G x E interactions, readers are referred to Davies et al. (2012) and Westneat & Fox (2010).

Chapters 2-9 address topics related to features of female behavior, particularly, as they pertain to mating, maternal tendencies, and gregariousness. Focusing on females, their strategies, and their energetic requirements as the primary driver of group-living and patterns of male behavior and dispersion is fundamental to an understanding of mammal societies because fertilizable females are a limiting resource for males and, subsequently, an ultimate determinant of male “fitness." Though these and other important concepts are implicit in some of TC-B's discussions, explicit use of many principles inherent to Behavioral Ecology are unclear or lacking (e.g., integration of Hamilton's rule [rb > c] throughout chapters, acknowledgment of the many competing hypotheses in Ecology pertaining to dispersal or multiple-mating by females, use of optimality formulations). As an example from Chapter 5 (“Maternal care”), TC-B's treatment asserts, accurately, that mammalian females invest heavily in current offspring, but theory holds that, after parturition, female resources, above some critical minimum, are channeled into future reproduction and lifetime reproductive success--“fitness.”

Chapters 10-16 pertain to males, especially, mating strategies, relations with females, and paternal care. Characteristic of Mammal Societies as a whole, these chapters are literature reviews of mostly descriptive publications from the Animal Behavior literature. Life history evolution is addressed in this chapter without mentioning the importance of tradeoffs, the distinction between semelparity and iteroparity (“fast” and “slow” life history trajectories, respectively), the importance of life-tables and the role of mortality as a driver of life-history evolution (Stearns 2000). Chapter 17 reviews “Cooperative breeding,” one of TC-B's specializations, and Chapter 18 presents a discussion of “Sex differences." Throughout the book, the author impresses the reader with the centrality of sex, sexual competition, and mating—topics of import in TC-B's career, though one is surprised that more attention is not given to Sexual Selection, per se. Chapters 19 and 20 address hominoids and hominids, including, modern humans, topics often missing or skimmed in other Animal Behavior texts.

TC-B presents at least one controversial formulation in Mammal Societies by asserting, with no supporting evidence or logical arguments, that no mammals are “eusocial”²—that the highest grade of sociality in mammals is “cooperative breeding.” This view is orthogonal to standard practice in Mammalian Social Biology whereby the social mole rats are typically classified as “primitively” eusocial. Technically, according to common usage, “cooperative breeders” might, as well, be classified “primitively” eusocial because of the presence of reproductive division of labor [cooperation between specialists] in the form of totipotent “helpers” (see Jones 2014, p 48-52). Mammal Societies exemplifies the need for practitioners of Natural History, Animal Behavior, and Behavioral Ecology to revisit topics such as standardization of terminology, advancement of the Hamiltonian Project, the roles of quantitative theory and modeling (in particular, agent-based modeling), field experiments, as well as, hypothesis-testing [including, the role of null-hypotheses] based on 1st principles. The text will appeal to professors wanting a Natural History, mostly, non-quantitative, review allowing supplementary reading to be incorporated into a syllabus. Future syntheses of Mammalian Social Biology will rely on mainstream schemas from Ecology & Evolution, in particular, employing a Major Transitions Approach (cf. West et al. 2015), in addition to, Population Ecology, of which Behavioral Ecology is a sub-field.

¹Care of offspring by conspecifics other than the mother
²”The evolution of eusociality, here defined as the emergence of societies with reproductive division of labour and cooperative brood care, has occurred under specific ecological, genetic, and life history conditions. Although sophisticated levels of cooperation have evolved in the largest and more complex societies, conflicts among individuals are still common because, in contrast to cells of an organism, they are not genetically identical,”--i.e., not "clones" (Keller & Chapuisat, 2010)

References

Bradbury JW (1981) The evolution of leks. In Natural selection and social behavior. (RD Alexander, DW Tinkle, eds). Chiron Press, New York, pp 138-169.

Briga M, Pen I, Wright J (2012) Care for kin: within-group relatedness and allomaternal care are positively correlated and conserved throughout the mammalian phylogeny. Biology Letters: p.rsbl20120159

Clutton-Brock TH (2021) Social evolution in mammals. Science 373(6561): doi:10.1126/science.abc9699. 

Clutton-Brock TH, Parker GA (1995) Punishment in animal societies. Nature 373: 209-216.

Davies NB, Krebs JR, West SA (2012) Introduction to behavioral ecology. Wiley-Blackwell, 4th edition. Oxford, UK.

Eisenberg JF (1981) Mammalian radiations. U Chicago Press.

Jones CB (2014) Evolution of mammalian sociality in an ecological perspective. Springer, New York.

Keller L, Chapuisat M (2010) Eusociality and cooperation. In Encyclopedia of life sciences. Macmillan, published online: DOI: 10.1002/9780470015902.a0003670.pub

Ladevèze S, de Muizon C, Beck RMD, Germain D, Cespedes-Paz R (2011) Earliest evidence of mammalian social behaviour in the basal Tertiary of Bolivia. Nature 474: 83-86.

Sibley RM, Hone J, Clutton-Brock TH (eds) (2003) Wildlife population growth rates. The Royal Society: Cambridge University Press, Cambridge University Press, UK.

Stearns SC (2000) Life history evolution: successes, limitations, and prospects. Naturwissenschaften 87: 476-486.

West SA, Fisher RM, Gardner RA, Kiels ET (2015) Major evolutionary transitions in individuality. PNAS 112(33): 10112-10119.

Westneat D, Fox C (eds) (2010) Evolutionary behavioral ecology. Oxford University Press, Oxford University Press, UK.

Wilson EO (1971) The insect societies. Belknap (Harvard), Cambridge, MA.

Wilson EO (1975) Sociobiology: the new synthesis. Belknap (Harvard), Cambridge, MA.


*Originally published in International Society for Behavioral Ecology Newsletter, 2016.


Addendum: I want to apologize to Tim Clutton-Brock for this review which expresses, as much as anything else, my disappointment in his text--of which I had great expectations. My expectations were so high--I expected a synthetic masterpiece in the context of evolution and the Major Transitions Approach--something on the order of EO Wilson's, The Insect Societies (1971), but, for Mammals. Even a book like JF Eisenberg's, mammalian "radiations" (1981), but about mammalian social evolution--extending Eisenberg's relevant chapters--would have been a major advance for the field. Instead, Clutton-Brock's book, whose title is a misnomer, is little more than a review of many highly selected publications without a conceptual framework [e.g., The Hamiltonian Project (the General Law of Social Evolution); Major Transitions, including, Sociality (Cooperation, after Hamilton 11964), as well as, Complex Sociality: SPECIALIZATION: division-of-labor (Cooperation between specialists); reproductive DoL, task, role, &/or morphological specialization] without any treatment of general patterns, without standardization of terminology, with only a nod to, systematic, quantitative theory--including, Hamilton's rule, and all in the context of a colonial historical-academic framework [e.g., every photograph of people of African descent is of primitive groups save one, and that one of an African guide, apparently, on a hunting safari with white male tourists. Unless I am mistaken, only a very few women are highlighted. Surely, TC-B might have provided a nod to changing worldviews by highlighting one or more of his African & female colleagues who must exist since TC-B has been conducting research in Africa for decades; if TC-B has not had African collaborators, volumes are silently spoken [admittedly, I know nothing about his personal or academic or research affiliations or his views on race, ethnicity, class or gender; and, I "get" it--the "greats" in Animal Behavior are, mostly, white men--even, until recently, in Anthropology, & I defer to the historical record ... nonetheless, it would have been generous to include, say, "Griff" Ewer, as deserving of recognition, for example--if only for the sake of appearances, but, then, my own biases are showing; in the final event, it would not detract from C-B's legacy for him to have been more generous in his historical acknowledgements].In short, as one who has admired TC-B's exhaustively rendered empirical work for decades, my expectations and anticipations, as well as, intellectual curiosity, were totally deflated by the long  literature review treated herein. A synthesis of mammalian Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, in other words, a text on Mammal Societies, awaits future treatment. John F. Eisenberg's 1981 book, "radiations," is the closest thing we have so far to a synthesis of mammalian social biology. 5/9/2020; slight edit, 12/30/2023 ...

Monday, December 17, 2018

My years as a Behavioral Ecologist (1973----->) (Clara B. Jones)

My years as a Behavioral Ecologist (1973----->) [Behavioral Ecology: study of how Dispersion [Distribution & Abundance] of organisms "maps" onto Dispersion of limiting resources in Time & Space--the [John Hurreel] Crook-ian Model, John Hurrel Crook
Behaviour. Supplement No. 10, The Evolution of Social Organisation and Visual Communication in the Weaver Birds (Ploceine) (1964)

Conceptual Framework: FIRST PRINCIPLES OF BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY:: E[nergy]: Acquisition->Consumption->Allocation====> Worker &/or Reproductive &/or Dependent...(Males, T[ime] Minimizers; Females, E[nergy] Maximizers)

#womeninscience #womeninbehavioralecology

1. The Science culture that I experienced 45 years ago might be called a "Brigade System" (or, perhaps, rather, an apprentice system)--hard-nosed, mostly male, rigid, rigorous--with obsessive attention to detail and no hand-holding. It was understood that many wouldn't survive the regime--we took this for granted--bad experiences were just part of the obstacle course. This system motivated me to be the best scientist I could be--emulating the work and standards of the premier Behavioral Ecologists of that time [especially, the early work of, John Hurrell Crook (birds, primates), Stephen C. Emlen (birds, humans, one of my professors), Jack Bradbury (bats, one of my professors), Ruth Buskirk (spiders, baboons, one of my professors), & Sandy Vehrencamp (birds, bats, a fellow graduate student)--the Behaviorist, M.E.P. Seligman, and the Social Biologist, Mary Jane West-Eberhard, were also critical to my early career].

2. Having said the above, we had mutual respect among all deserving parties, whatever their rank, and had a lot of fun.

3. A necessary and sufficient component of my own motivation was falling in love with fieldwork in 1973 [I was 30--a "late-bloomer"] after which nothing ever competed with my work/career. Another factor important to my progress was relieving myself of most caretaking responsibilities [in 1979].

4. At one point during my graduate training, I asked my undergraduate advisor, Harry Levin (linguistics), what was necessary to be successful as a scientist. He replied, "Learn to cope with humiliation." Afterwards, it occurred to me that I would need to have a "thick skin." It was, also, clear that I would have to make it work for me, by myself, on my own, but on others' terms--the terms set by those at the top of my fields--Behavioral Ecology, Social Biology, Ethology, and, to a lesser degree, Behaviorism. Serious Scientists would let me know--straightforwardly--when they thought I was not "measuring up." I could leave Science, or, I would need to find a way to "measure up." Combined with the ability to "hear" critical and negative feedback, I, eventually, enjoyed the challenges inherent to intense competition.

At another point--after  completing my Ph.D.--my major advisor, Ethologist (birds--Agapornis) William C. Dilger, told me, "You have done less with more than any other graduate student I've had." This feedback shook me; however, the lesson was clear--it is very difficult, indeed, to earn the right to be taken seriously by a serious Scientist. Indeed, in graduate school, it was standard not to call ones-self "Scientist" until a recognized scientist had labeled you "Scientist." Dilger's comment reinforced that I needed to take myself and my aspirations seriously if I, and, more importantly, my work, were to earn the opportunity to be taken seriously. A consequence of this experience has been that I consider it a female's responsibility--to herself, more, even, than to others-- to find a way to develop her potential to the fullest, relative to the highest standards of her field[s].

These words of wisdom & feedback from two highly-regarded scientists were instrumental in motivating me to be my best while understanding realities of the academic/professional/research landscape. The path is difficult, and there are no guarantees.

5. When I found my path in Behavioral Ecology to be difficult, I reminded myself that, if I didn't find a way to make it work, there was always another female breathing down my neck who was not defeated by trying or who was making it work.

6. It is central to who I am as a Scientist to view myself having a role comparable to a Judge of the Court. My colleagues and I, if taken seriously, get to "weigh in" on difficult decisions, using critical thinking, data, other components of scientific methods, and expertise.

7. It is important to me that I never used a sex/gender card, a race card, a class card, or a disability card.

8. I consider myself a feminist in the molds of Simone de Beauvoir and, especially, Francoise Giroud whose autobiography, I Give You My Word, which I read early in graduate school, changed my life forever. Everything changed after I read that book--combined with my first field season in 1973.

9. I free myself; others do not free me. All know the way.

10. So-called "imposter syndrome" represented important, valid feedback to me that something needed to be corrected. I did not deny my gut and brain. I figured it out. I realized, there was/is always another female prepared to take my place. That other female would have dealt with her sense of imposition, if she had such, and would have self-corrected.

11. As a woman of color (WOC) in Science who conducted fieldwork, I ran away, rapidly, from anyone who wanted to treat me with kid gloves or treat me differently than the non-marginalized person. This did not always work to my advantage or prove to be the shortest route to authenticity*, but it preserved my self-respect.

12. I think I have few, if any, complaints as a WOC in Science because: [1] I almost always see the glass as half-full rather than half-empty; [2] I take almost nothing personally--what another person does or says reflects on them, not me; [3] I have an uncanny ability to focus without distraction; [4] I try, and, mostly, succeed, at not multitasking, [5] I have an uncanny ability to compartmentalize; [6] I chose, and, continue to choose, very, very carefully, whose critical feedback I weight heavily; and, [7] I, simply, kept my nose to the grindstone [though, primarily for health reasons, I started & re-started quite a few times]. Related to the foregoing, I may be "tone deaf" about what the outspoken and activist young females want to achieve as scientists [I am thinking, particularly, of fieldworkers]. It has taken me a long time to "get" the notion that what I wanted out of a career is not, necessarily, what other females wanted/want. Decisions, choices were straightforward for me. I, simply, chose whatever option[s] would get me closer to my goal which was to be the best scientist I could be, given my talents & given the fact that I did not have higher-order quantitative skills. This is a very simple decision-rule. I, actually, think that many women in Science use this strategy.

13. Just as a hunch, I would suggest that a critical factor in determining a female's success as a scientist is not so much whether she marries or has children but whether she assumes caretaking responsibilities. Whatever the case, I think these factors deserve further study. I would, especially, like to see intense investigation of what traits characterize those women who achieve high rank as scientists [as usual, I am, particularly, thinking of women who conduct fieldwork in the biological sciences]. For example, are there, beyond chance occurrences, married women with or without children who have careers like, say, Mary Willson's, or, perhaps, most notably, Louise Emmons'? If so, lets highlight these women. If not, why not? These are all issues that can be addressed empirically, including, consideration & tests of alternative hypotheses. If only by chance alone, sexism cannot account for all of the differences that we see between male scientists and female scientists in the same discipline. What are all of the factors that are at play?

14. Probably the only whining I'll permit myself: ... throughout my whole career, with a few exceptions [Mary Jane West-Eberhard, Ruth Buskirk, Sandy Vehrencamp, & Mary Willson being notable exceptions], female scientists haven't given me "the time of day"... virtually, all of the scientists who have provided constructive criticism, encouragement, & who have shared ideas, have been men... additionally, with a couple of exceptions, all of the researchers who have treated me dismissively, to my face or via other sorts of communication, have been females-- all of them Primatologists-- a fact in no manner related to my low estimation of Primatology ["Biological Anthropology"] as a field...

15. Now, getting back to Science: Every material outcome has a mathematical proof.

*The hardest thing for anyone in Science is to earn the right to be taken seriously.

Clara B. Jones
929 Bonifant Street
Apt. 512
Silver Spring, MD 20910, USA
Cell: (828) 279-4429
E-mail: foucault03@gmail.com; mapcbj@gmail.com


Monday, August 13, 2018

Social Biology: Questions For Research after Sutherland WJ et al. (2013) [Clara B. Jones]



Social Biology: Questions for research based upon Sutherland WJ et al. (2013) Identification of 100 fundamental ecological questions. J Ecology 101, 58-67. This list is not intended as a substitute for the original questions nor does it represent an exhaustive treatment of the ways that the original list can be interpolated, interpreted, or used by Social Biologists and Behavioral Ecologists. The following list interpolates questions primarily related to individual and population levels of analysis, with some questions, additionally, pertaining to Community and Ecosystem levels. However, researchers are encouraged to interpolate other questions in the original list, e.g., those devoted to Disease Ecology. As well, important methodological questions relevant to Social Biology and Behavioral Ecology are presented in the original paper. Overall, the fundamental “decision rule” is to interpret and interpolate questions as they may pertain to Social Biology as per all levels and features of group-living taxa. Clearly, questions might be interpolated relative to "Behavior" per se for broad treatment by Behavioral Ecologists.  Submitted by Clara B. Jones: @cbjones1943 [Twitter]

  • What are the evolutionary consequences of group-living populations becoming less connected through fragmentation?
  • How local is adaptation in group-living populations?
  • For group-living taxa, what are the ecological causes and consequences of epigenetic variation?
  • For group-living taxa, what are the relative contributions of different levels of selection (gene, individual, group) to life-history evolution and the resulting population dynamics?
  • What selective forces cause sex differences in life-history and what are their consequences for population dynamics of group-living taxa?
  • How do the strength and form of density-dependence influence feedbacks between population dynamics and life-history evolution of group-living taxa?
  • How does phenotypic plasticity influence evolutionary trajectories of social traits?
  • How variable are social traits across taxa?
  • What are the genetic and physiological bases of life-history tradeoffs in group-living taxa?
  • What are the evolutionary and ecological mechanisms governing range margins of group-living populations?
  • How can we upscale detailed processes at the level of individuals into patterns at the population scale in group-living taxa?
  • What are the heritability/genetic bases of dispersal and movement behavior[s] in group-living taxa?
  • How do group-living organisms make movement decisions in relation to dispersal, migration, foraging, or mate search?
  • For group-living taxa, do different demographic rates vary predictably over different spatial scales, and how do they then combine to influence spatio-temporal population dynamics?
  • For group-living taxa, how does demographic and spatial structure modify the effects of environmental stochasticity on population dynamics?
  • For group-living taxa, how do environmental stochasticity and environmental change interact with density-dependence to generate population dynamics and distributions?
  • For group-living taxa, to what degree do trans-generational effects on life histories, such as maternal effects, impact on population dynamics?
  • For group-living taxa, how does covariance among life-history traits affect their contributions to population dynamics?
  • What is the relative importance of direct (consumption, competition) vs. indirect (induced behavioral change) interactions in determining the effect of one group-living population upon another?
  • For group-living taxa, how important is individual variation to population, community, and ecosystem dynamics?
  • For group-living taxa, what demographic traits [genetic, individual, group, population] determine the resilience of natural populations to disturbance and perturbation [“stress”]?
  • How well can community properties and responses to environmental change be predicted from the distribution of social traits?
  • Thinking of group-living taxa, how do social traits influence ecological network structure?
  • How many group-living taxa can coexist in a given area?
  • Thinking of group-living taxa, how do resource pulses affect resource use and interactions between individuals and groups?
  • How important are group-living taxa in the functioning of ecological communities?
  • Thinking of group-living taxa, which taxa are most sensitive to to changes in community composition?
  • What are the relative contributions of [different levels of] group-living taxa to biodiversity and ecosystem functioning?
  • Thinking of group-living taxa, how does nutrient input and output affect productivity in ecosystems?
  • Which, if any, group-living taxa are functionally redundant in the context of stochastic or directional environmental changes?
  • What unexploited theories used by other disciplines could inform Social Biology and Behavioral Ecology?



Saturday, March 24, 2018

Some ideas about Comparative Sociobiology & Behavioral Ecology [2007-2010] (Clara B. Jones)


NESCent Project: 2007-2010
COMPARATIVE SOCIOBIOLOGY AND BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY: A SYNTHETIC
REVIEW
© Clara B. Jones, Ph.D.
National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent), Duke University
Revised: 2 February 2008
Introduction, Background, and Hypotheses: The purpose of this project is to conduct a
synthetic, comparative analysis of the determinants of social evolution within and across several
animal taxa, in particular, insects, fish, birds, and mammals. Social evolution, a density-dependent
effect, has been characterized in two related ways in the literature, one emphasizing an
individual’s benefits to a conspecific’s lifetime reproductive success or “inclusive fitness”
(cooperation, altruism: e.g., West, 1967), the other defining sociality as all interindividual
interactions among conspecifics and classifying it broadly as selfishness, cooperation, altruism, or
spite (e.g., Trivers, 1985), depending upon differential costs and benefits to actor and recipient.
To my knowledge, a quantitative, empirical, synthetic approach has not been undertaken on this
topic within and between families and classes, although several narrative and qualitative
assessments exist (e.g., Wilson, 1971, 1975; Vehrencamp, 1979; Helms Cahan et al., 2002).
Sociality occurs inconsistently though widely in nature, and several authors (e.g., Maynard Smith
& Szathmary, 2002; also see Taborsky, 2007) have pointed out that the evolution of social
behavior and social organization is a seminal biological transition, an insight that has been
underestimated in the scientific literature. Significantly, much debate exists not only about the
potential to derive general principles of social evolution but also about the particular parameters
of such general statements should they exist (see Crespi & Choe, 1997; Reeve, 2001; Frank,
2006; Reeve & Hölldobler, 2007; Crespi, 2007). A comparative and synthetic analysis of social
evolution has the potential to reveal patterns and processes—both conserved and taxon specific—
permitting tests of competing hypotheses for the evolution of sociality (especially Helms Cahan
et al., 2002; also see Vehrencamp, 1979; Reeve, 2001; Nowak, 2006; Frank, 2006; Reeve &
Hölldobler, 2007) as well as the identification of complementary and opposing models within and
between taxonomic groups (e.g., invertebrates and vertebrates; birds and mammals; terrestrial and
aquatic forms; arboreal and terrestrial species). These works lead to the following tests:
Patterns and processes in the dataset will reveal a “series” or “trajectory” of events
about dispersal, breeding, and alloparental care (after Helms-Cahan et al., 2002).
This approach permits the construction of a decision tree for each unit within and
between taxa and the quantitative analysis of alternative “trajectories” including
benefits and constraints once a database based upon empirical results for these factors
has been assembled. Helms Cahan et al. (2002, Table 1, p. 210) provide a
preliminary, qualitative schema based upon data for ≈50 species; however, the
proposed database would expand this treatment to the broadest possible range of taxa
among insects, fish, birds, and mammals based upon empirical reports, both
published and unpublished. The primary hypothesis derived from the schema of
Helms-Cahan et al. is: Social evolution is a function of differential benefits and
constraints from dispersal, breeding, and alloparental care.
Recent attempts to formulate synthetic statements of social evolution (e.g.,
Vehrencamp, 2000; Reeve, 2001; Crespi, 2005; Faulkes et al., 1997; Reeve &
Hölldobler, 2007) have advanced somewhat different suites of characteristics than
those of Helms Cahan et al. (2002). As a result, the proposed database will include,
as well, measures of costs of reproduction, “reduced reproduction”, tradeoffs between
helping and offspring production, the presence or absence of castes, coefficients of
within-group relatedness, intragroup competition, and intergroup competition,
expanding the hypothesis above by several factors.
The proposed database would, also, permit quantitative tests of Vehrencamp’s (1979)
narrative schema of “evolutionary routes to sociality”. Specifically, this author
proposes “familial” (solitary, subsocial, intermediate subsocial, and eusocial) and
parasocial” (solitary, communal, quasisocial, semisocial, and eusocial) routes as
trajectories differentiating classes of social organisms. In addition to providing a
quantitative treatment of these ideas, the proposed review would evaluate these
routes” across a broad range of taxa.
Nowak (2006) has recently proposed five “rules for the evolution of cooperation”:
kin selection, direct reciprocity, indirect reciprocity, network reciprocity, and group
selection. This author provides theoretical treatments for each strategy (“rule”), and
the realism of his results can be evaluated by the proposed analysis.
The proposed review will also permit tests of Frank’s (2006) theoretical formulations
concerning the differential effects for social evolution of kin selection and
repression of competition” (Frank, 1995, 1998, 2006) in addition to other work on
the topic of “policing” (Ratnieks & Wenseleers, 2005). Combined with the questions
based upon the analysis of Helms Cahan et al. (2002), the new project may yield
insights into the necessary and/or sufficient factors favoring social evolution.
Previous work has sometimes viewed social effects and sexual/reproductive effects as
effectively the same (West, 1967; also see Taborsky, 1994; Reeve, 2001; Reeve &
Hölldobler, 2007). Importantly, however, recent treatments demonstrate the value of
treating Mating Systems and Social Systems from a coevolutionary perspective
(Crespi, 2007, Figure 20.1). The present project will follow Crespi’s (2007)
paradigm in its specification, delineation, and analysis of character traits/states, both
those advanced in the previous literature and those deemed particularly significant by
this author and her future collaborators (e.g., quantified local effects as they might
influence density-dependence (see West et al., 2002). Paucity of available datasets
may require collaboration with one or more theoreticians and analyses of data will
require consultation with biometricians and, possibly, specialists in bioinformatics.
Related to the above, several authors have emphasized the importance of
polymorphisms and polyphenisms for behavioral expression (e.g., West-Eberhard,
2003; Jones, 2005a, b), and it has been noted that development involves “the
ontogeny of all aspects of the phenotype, at all levels of organization, and in all
organisms” (West-Eberhard, 2003, p. vii). Hypothetically, the current conceptual
framework might be conducted at any or all levels of biological/organismal analysis
from the molecular to the community, tasks that appear at this point in time to be
daunting. Clearly, judgment calls will need to be made concerning the parameters
and logistics of the present project, decisions to be made in accord with collaborators
and advisors.
As discussed in Jones (2005a, c; also see Jarvis, 1978; Lovegrove & Wissel, 1988; Heinze &
Keller, 2000; Jones & Agoramoorthy, 2003; Russell et al., 2003; Whitfield, 2006; Toth et al.,
2007), the literature on social evolution provides many indicators that energetic factors, in
particular, energy savings, may provide fundamental explanations for its rise (e.g., Leontideus
rosalia: Kleiman, 1977; Kierulff & Rylands, 2003). I am particularly interested in the potential
for pathways sensitive to energy-maximization and/or energy-savings to be implicated across taxa
in the evolution of complex sociality (see, especially, Schoener, 1971; Toth et al., 2007 and
references). Ultimately, it is likely that mathematical expressions of the fundamental energetic
aetiology of sociality can be expressed as a function of body mass (m) derived from the
3
fundamental relation, E= mc2. This treatment requires that the database envisioned herein include
information on environmental regimes (e.g., food dispersion and quality) that can be treated
quantitatively with the factors advanced by Helms Cahan et al. (2002). Other measures of
possible significance (e.g., resource patchiness and/or environmental stochasticity; see Emlen,
1973; Roughgarden, 1979) can, also, be added to the analysis and to the factors included in our
main hypothesis stated above, decisions that will be refined as the program progresses.
Figure 1 (see http://www.nescent.org/dir/sabbatical_fellow.php?id=00005: © Clara B. Jones)
displays suggested directions of potential conflict(s) (differential optima) where one class
or category of individuals imposes costs in inclusive fitness upon another class or
category of individuals (closed arrows) to which the latter may respond
adaptively (broken arrows). Each of these potential conflicts among interacting
individuals or groups from different age-sex categories (or from the category of
interaction between food and females) may be analyzed in the context of generalized
conflict theory” (e.g. Rice, 2000; Gavrilets, 2000; Burt & Trivers, 2006), including
mechanisms of coevolution resulting from evolutionary “arms races” (Van Valen, 1973).
Across taxa, the evolution of social behavior (interindividual interactions among
conspecifics) is likely to reveal the significance of causes, mechanisms, functions, and
consequences of patterns of conflict for complex sociality--the repression of competition
by selfish, cooperative, altruistic, or spiteful behavior."
Search Strategy for the Analysis: In addition to the solicitation of unpublished data,
conventional search strategies will be employed, including searching databases (e.g., Biosis,
PubMed) and secondary sources (e.g., Wilson, 1971, 1975). Other approaches will be evaluated
with one or more collaborators as the project proceeds, with data quality issues always in mind.
Sample “Call for Data”: An Excel file detailing all variables will be provided to potential
contributors for input of data with 6 month timeframe for submission of data and ≈2 year
timeframe for assembly of database.
Potential Confounding Variables/Data Quality Issues: Judgment calls will need to be made by
the author and her future collaborator(s) concerning, in particular: assessing error, including
treatment of empty cells (if appropriate to the quantitative analyses, confidence intervals will be
assigned); related to the prior issue: it is unlikely that the shapes of the populations of sampling
distributions can be assessed; uneven quality of data, in particular, unpublished data;
inconsistencies between data for the same species; definitions of factors (e.g., primary vs.
secondary dispersal; varieties of co-breeding); architecture of dataset relative to methods of
quantitative analysis (How to analyze large comparative datasets?), etc. Since much of the theory
upon which the present project is based is relatively recent, a major problem will be to assemble
complete datasets for a sufficient sample size. This challenge presents yet another quality issue:
using several sources to assemble complete sets of information for the same species. With
patience and diligence and with input from a variety of colleagues, these and remaining quality
issues are likely to be minimized for a first approximation of the outlined objectives and
conceptual framework using multivariate and/or regression treatments as well as comparative
analysis.
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