Genetic polymorphisms between altruism and selfishness close to the Hamilton threshold rb = c

Genes that in certain conditions make their carriers altruistic are being identified, and altruism and selfishness have shown to be heritable in man. This raises the possibility that genetic polymorphisms for altruism/selfishness exist in man and other animals. Here we characterize some of the condi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Richard M. Sibly, Robert N. Curnow
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2017-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160649
id doaj-93dc93e0f2b24a6ea55362ddbd06940b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-93dc93e0f2b24a6ea55362ddbd06940b2020-11-25T04:02:08ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032017-01-014210.1098/rsos.160649160649Genetic polymorphisms between altruism and selfishness close to the Hamilton threshold rb = cRichard M. SiblyRobert N. CurnowGenes that in certain conditions make their carriers altruistic are being identified, and altruism and selfishness have shown to be heritable in man. This raises the possibility that genetic polymorphisms for altruism/selfishness exist in man and other animals. Here we characterize some of the conditions in which genetic polymorphisms may occur. We show for dominant or recessive alleles how the positions of stable equilibria depend on the benefit to the recipient, b, and the cost to the altruist, c, for diploid altruists helping half or full sibs, and haplodiploid altruists helping sisters. Stable polymorphisms always occur close to the Hamilton threshold rb = c. The position of the stable equilibrium moves away 0 or 1 with both increases in c, the cost paid by the altruist, and increasing divergence from the Hamilton threshold, and alleles for selfishness can reach frequencies around 50%. We evaluate quantitative estimates of b, c and r from field studies in the light of these predictions, but the values do not fall in the regions where genetic polymorphisms are expected. Nevertheless, it will be interesting to see as genes for altruism are discovered whether they are accompanied by alternate alleles for selfishness.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160649hamilton's rulepopulation geneticsstable polymorphisms
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Richard M. Sibly
Robert N. Curnow
spellingShingle Richard M. Sibly
Robert N. Curnow
Genetic polymorphisms between altruism and selfishness close to the Hamilton threshold rb = c
Royal Society Open Science
hamilton's rule
population genetics
stable polymorphisms
author_facet Richard M. Sibly
Robert N. Curnow
author_sort Richard M. Sibly
title Genetic polymorphisms between altruism and selfishness close to the Hamilton threshold rb = c
title_short Genetic polymorphisms between altruism and selfishness close to the Hamilton threshold rb = c
title_full Genetic polymorphisms between altruism and selfishness close to the Hamilton threshold rb = c
title_fullStr Genetic polymorphisms between altruism and selfishness close to the Hamilton threshold rb = c
title_full_unstemmed Genetic polymorphisms between altruism and selfishness close to the Hamilton threshold rb = c
title_sort genetic polymorphisms between altruism and selfishness close to the hamilton threshold rb = c
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Genes that in certain conditions make their carriers altruistic are being identified, and altruism and selfishness have shown to be heritable in man. This raises the possibility that genetic polymorphisms for altruism/selfishness exist in man and other animals. Here we characterize some of the conditions in which genetic polymorphisms may occur. We show for dominant or recessive alleles how the positions of stable equilibria depend on the benefit to the recipient, b, and the cost to the altruist, c, for diploid altruists helping half or full sibs, and haplodiploid altruists helping sisters. Stable polymorphisms always occur close to the Hamilton threshold rb = c. The position of the stable equilibrium moves away 0 or 1 with both increases in c, the cost paid by the altruist, and increasing divergence from the Hamilton threshold, and alleles for selfishness can reach frequencies around 50%. We evaluate quantitative estimates of b, c and r from field studies in the light of these predictions, but the values do not fall in the regions where genetic polymorphisms are expected. Nevertheless, it will be interesting to see as genes for altruism are discovered whether they are accompanied by alternate alleles for selfishness.
topic hamilton's rule
population genetics
stable polymorphisms
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.160649
work_keys_str_mv AT richardmsibly geneticpolymorphismsbetweenaltruismandselfishnessclosetothehamiltonthresholdrbc
AT robertncurnow geneticpolymorphismsbetweenaltruismandselfishnessclosetothehamiltonthresholdrbc
_version_ 1724444314661027840