TY - JOUR PY - 2010// TI - Adaptive dynamics of cooperation may prevent the coexistence of defectors and cooperators and even cause extinction JO - Proceedings of the Royal Society - biological sciences A1 - Parvinen, Kalle SP - 2493 EP - 2501 VL - 277 IS - 1693 N2 - It has recently been demonstrated that ecological feedback mechanisms can facilitate the emergence and maintenance of cooperation in public goods interactions: the replicator dynamics of defectors and cooperators can result, for example, in the ecological coexistence of cooperators and defectors. Here we show that these results change dramatically if cooperation strategy is not fixed but instead is a continuously varying trait under natural selection. For low values of the factor with which the value of resources is multiplied before they are shared among all participants, evolution will always favour lower cooperation strategies until the population falls below an Allee threshold and goes extinct, thus evolutionary suicide occurs. For higher values of the factor, there exists a unique evolutionarily singular strategy, which is convergence stable. Because the fitness function is linear with respect to the strategy of the mutant, this singular strategy is neutral against mutant invasions. This neutrality disappears if a nonlinear functional response in receiving benefits is assumed. For strictly concave functional responses, singular strategies become uninvadable. Evolutionary branching, which could result in the evolutionary emergence of cooperators and defectors, can occur only with locally convex functional responses, but we illustrate that it can also result in coevolutionary extinction.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0962-8452 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2010.0191 ID - ref1 ER -