College Level Evolution

Page 164

kin selection and closer relatives are benefited the most. Other kin discrimination factors include certain odors or certain phenotypes visible to relatives. Kin discrimination can be bad if it decreases the genetic variability in the population. Kin selection tends to keep populations close together so that relatives are near one another. This means that it would be less necessary to have kin discrimination because helping one s neighbors is likely to be the same thing as helping one s relatives. Neighbors are also likely to be relatives. Limited dispersal of organisms will usually favor cooperation but this isn t necessarily the case. This would be less likely to lead to cooperation if it means that the same relatives would have to compete for resources. Cooperation often has direct benefits to one s own offspring, leading to mutually beneficial behavior. Cooperation that increases population size could mean a decreased chance of getting eaten by predators. Cooperation can be enforced by punishing cheaters or rewarding cooperators. It does not have to be enforced if there is a shared benefit to cooperation. Meerkats can beat rival groups by cooperating to allow for a larger population. Cooperation in order to increase group size is called group augmentation”. It is beneficial for subordinates to cooperate even though they don t breed themselves. Cooperation is enforced by ejecting subordinate meerkats who themselves get pregnant. Enforcement of cooperation by rewarding cooperators and punishing cheaters is necessary sometimes because it increases the chance of cooperation. Ostracism is a typical punishment for cheaters.

GROUP LIVING Group living is when a species maintains some type of spatial proximity to one another. Group living is believed to have evolved after solitary living and happens in a species that gains an evolutionary advantage through group living. There is increased access to potential mates, increased ability to forage, increased protection against predators, and better access to social information. Groups can be heads, colonies, flocks, or other terms. Mixed species groups do exist in nature. Group living is hard to distinguish from solitary living and the end result is often an arbitrary definition. Sometimes, group living happens only during mating, the gathering or resources, or the raising of young. Group living does not have to be continuous for it to be present. It is not applied to things like moths that gather around lights or groups of animals that gather around a water source. There needs to be some type of social interaction.

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Course Questions and Answers

1hr
pages 212-279

Summary

6min
pages 208-211

Key Takeaways

0
page 203

Quiz

2min
pages 204-207

Future of the Planet with Global Warming

4min
pages 200-202

Human Extinction

2min
page 199

Ways Humans Might Evolve

2min
page 198

Quiz

2min
pages 192-194

Evolution of Senescence

4min
pages 188-190

Host and Pathogen Evolution

2min
page 187

Disease Susceptibility

2min
page 186

Quiz

3min
pages 180-183

Key Takeaways

0
page 179

Mosaic Coevolution

0
page 178

Antagonistic Coevolution

1min
page 177

Host-Parasite Coevolution

1min
page 176

Quiz

2min
pages 168-171

Key Takeaways

0
page 167

Coevolution and Mutualism

1min
page 175

Cooperation in Populations

2min
page 163

Group Living

2min
page 164

Hardy-Weinberg Model

1min
page 162

Quiz

3min
pages 155-158

Key Takeaways

0
page 154

Sex and Mate Selection

3min
pages 152-153

Mating Systems

1min
page 151

Quiz

3min
pages 141-144

Evolution of Sexual Reproduction

6min
pages 147-149

Key Takeaways

0
page 140

Mass Extinction

6min
pages 136-139

Background Extinction

2min
page 135

Quiz

2min
pages 127-130

Key Takeaways

0
page 126

Evolution before the Homo Genus

1min
page 121

Modern Human Evolution

1min
page 125

Evidence for Human Evolution

2min
page 120

Evolution of the Homo Genus

4min
pages 122-123

Human Migration

1min
page 119

Human Structural Changes

3min
pages 117-118

Human Evolution

1min
page 116

Quiz

3min
pages 110-113

Key Takeaways

0
page 109

Speciation and Modes of Speciation

4min
pages 106-107

Genetics of Speciation

1min
page 108

Quiz

3min
pages 99-102

Key Takeaways

0
page 98

Transition to Group Living

3min
pages 96-97

Evolution of Individuality

2min
page 95

Origin of Eukaryotes

2min
pages 91-92

Evolution of Multicellularity

4min
pages 93-94

Prokaryotic Cell and Eukaryotic Cell Evolution

6min
pages 82-85

Quiz

2min
pages 87-90

Viral Evolution

2min
page 81

Early Forms of Life

1min
page 80

Quiz

2min
pages 70-73

Key Takeaways

0
page 69

Genetic Processes

6min
pages 61-64

Genetic Variability and Mutation

1min
page 67

History of Genetics

1min
pages 59-60

Mendelian Genetics

2min
pages 65-66

Mutations

2min
page 68

Quiz

3min
pages 54-57

Key Takeaways

0
page 53

Phylogenetics and Molecular Phylogenetics

2min
pages 51-52

Adaptation, Fitness, and Reproductive Success

8min
pages 32-35

Phylogenic Trees

3min
pages 46-48

Key Takeaways

0
page 38

Quiz

2min
pages 39-42

Cladistics

2min
pages 49-50

Quiz

3min
pages 23-26

Key Takeaways

0
page 22

The Story of Darwin

3min
pages 20-21

Evolutionary Thought in Ancient Times

2min
page 15

Nineteenth Century Evolution

4min
pages 17-18

Christian Philosophies on Evolution

2min
page 16

Preface

6min
pages 8-11

Timeline of Evolutionary Theories

1min
page 14

After Darwin and Natural Selection

1min
page 19
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