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Mom was right: Nice guys don't always finish last
November 06, 2009
BINGHAMTON, NY -- Picture it: One jerk in a bar spends the night delivering bad come-ons to women. By the end of the evening, the women aren't receptive to even the nicest guys around. It's a scenario with a basis in evolutionary theory. Males increase their fitness by acquiring more mates; however, this is often not the case for females - and therein lies the conflict.
Researchers at Binghamton University and the University of Arizona studied sexual conflict in water striders, an insect that's a common model system. They found that, given a choice, females will group themselves around the gentlemen.
The results of the groundbreaking experiment - in which the insects had a freedom of movement not possible in most studies of sexual conflict - appear in the Nov. 6 edition of the prestigious journal Science.
"The original title of the paper was 'Nice Guys Don't Always Finish Last,'" lead author Omar Tonsi Eldakar said. "I find that statement to be quite descriptive of the project."
Previous studies of sexual conflict generally have limited individual movement, emphasizing local competition, noted Eldakar, a 2008 PhD graduate of Binghamton University and a post-doctoral fellow with the Center for Insect Science at the University of Arizona.
Eldakar said he perceives sexual conflict as an example of the "tragedy of the commons," a situation in which the most exploitive strategy benefits the individual at the expense of the group. (The classic example is of a shepherd who adds another animal to his herd even though the shared pasture is overgrazed.) Few researchers have framed sexual conflict in these terms; however, Eldakar sees a parallel between that shared pasture and the availability of females.
"When you pit exploitation against prudence in direct competition over a shared resource, you're putting them into a scenario that favors the short-term, exploitative strategy, making it difficult to observe the advantage of prudence," he said. "This does not accurately reflect what occurs in natural populations. But given a choice, females look for a way to get away from persistent males. If you allow individuals to self-organize, females find these nice guys and group around them, changing the landscape of competition."
Eldakar and his colleagues have shown through previous studies that groups in which a more gentlemanly approach to mating prevails do better on the whole, even though jerks generally outperform the nice guys when they have to compete one-on-one.
Eldakar thought of the insects as "nice guys" vs. "jerks;" his adviser, David Sloan Wilson, a co-author of the paper and a distinguished professor of biological sciences at Binghamton, termed them "gentlemen" vs. "psychopaths."
"The presence of psychopaths dramatically reduced the productivity of the population," Wilson said. "When all the males were gentlemen, the females laid about three times more eggs than they did when all the males were psychopaths. And yet within each group the psychopaths were doing better than the gentlemen. How do the gentlemen persist if they're disadvantaged within the group?"
Once the females could move between groups, the researchers had their answer. Eldakar and Michael J. Dlugos, then also a Binghamton graduate student, devised a wading pool equipped with special doors that could restrict movement between groups or allow the insects to move freely.
"When they opened the doors, the females would leave whenever a psychopath came around," Wilson said. "The whole thing resulted in a heterogeneity in which the females were clustered with the gentlemen. It's the movement of individuals that creates these differences between groups that favor nonaggressive males."
Binghamton University
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Related Sexual Conflict Current Events and Sexual Conflict News Articles Sexual Conflict Current Events and Sexual Conflict News RSS Why nice guys usually get the girls Female water striders often reject their most persistent and aggressive suitors and prefer the males who aren't so grabby, according to new research. Water striders are insects commonly seen skittering across the surface of streams.
Genetic conflict in fish led to evolution of new sex chromosomes University of Maryland biologists have genetically mapped the sex chromosomes of several species of cichlid (pronounced "sick-lid") fish from Lake Malawi, East Africa, and identified a mechanism by which new sex chromosomes may evolve.
East African cichlid fish offer new understanding of genetic basis of sex determination Biologists have genetically mapped the sex chromosomes of several species of cichlid fish from Lake Malawi, East Africa, and identified a mechanism by which new sex chromosomes may evolve.
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A new explanation for evolutionary changes in genetic sex-determination systems In animals with separate sexes, embryos commit to becoming male or female at an early stage. Often this key decision is made by sex determination genes on the sex chromosomes. The genes involved in sexual development have changed remarkably little during evolution. In contrast, the sex determination genes and the sex chromosomes themselves are among the most rapidly changing features of the genome.
Romance, schmomance - Natural selection continues even after sex Some breaking news, just in time for Valentine's Day: Researchers have identified something called 'sperm competition' that they think has evolved to ensure a genetic future. In sexual reproduction, natural selection is generally thought of as something that happens prior to - and in fact leads to - the Big Event.
Males have adapted to battle with competing sperm In the context of sexual reproduction, natural selection is generally thought of as a pre-copulation mechanism. We are drawn to features of the human body that tell us our partner is healthy and will provide us a fighting opportunity to carry on our genetic lineage.
War between the sexes influences evolution in some species, say scientists Competition and conflict between males and females start inside the egg in some species, say scientists.
New study explores beetle species with two forms of females A fascinating new study from the forthcoming issue of The American Naturalist attempts to explain the mysterious persistence of two forms of females in many diving beetle populations.
Tufts researchers shine light on firefly mysteries This summer, in a darkened meadow west of Boston, Tufts University biologists are continuing to shine new light on the frenzied love life of fireflies. More Sexual Conflict Current Events and Sexual Conflict News Articles
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