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Alternative reproductive tactics and status-dependent selection
Author(s) -
Jonathan S. F. Lee
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
behavioral ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.162
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1465-7279
pISSN - 1045-2249
DOI - 10.1093/beheco/ari030
Subject(s) - stochastic game , selection (genetic algorithm) , reproductive success , quality (philosophy) , competition (biology) , point (geometry) , resource (disambiguation) , biology , microeconomics , economics , demography , computer science , population , ecology , artificial intelligence , sociology , mathematics , philosophy , computer network , geometry , epistemology
The status-dependent selection model on alternative reproductive tactics predicts a single switch-point in status: usually all players above some status (e.g., competitive ability) should practice the tactic with the higher average payoff, while those below that point should make the "best of a bad job" by practicing the alternative, lower payoff tactic. Many empirical studies indeed show a relationship between status and tactic choice, but they do not conform to this single switch-point prediction. I modify the status-dependent selection model by considering status-dependent fitness that is mediated, at least in part, by resource acquisition (e.g., status-based competition for territories or nuptial gifts). With variation in resource quality, predicted tactic-choice distributions change: a high-status male may be territorial on a high-quality territory, a lower status male may practice an alternative tactic, and an even lower status male may be territorial on a low-quality territory. Tactic choice thus alternates as in many empirical studies and can appear to be but is not actually stochastic. As the number of theoretically predicted switch-points increases, however, mixed or mixed-conditional strategies should become more prevalent. While alternative tactics will likely usually differ in mean payoff, viewing alternative reproductive tactics as inherently "better" or "worse" (e.g., viewing cuckoldry as "worse"--the best of a bad job) is misleading if not tempered with awareness that payoff can vary greatly within tactics and overlap between tactics. Copyright 2005.alternative reproductive tactic; best of a bad job; conditional strategy; cuckoldry; mixed strategy; status-dependent selection; switch-point; territoriality

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