Exploitative leaders incite intergroup warfare in a social mammal

Collective conflicts among humans are widespread, although often highly destructive. A classic explanation for the prevalence of such warfare in some human societies is leadership by selfserving individuals that reap the benefits of conflict while other members of society pay the costs. Here, we sho...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2020-11, Vol.117 (47), p.29759-29766
Hauptverfasser: Johnstone, Rufus A., Cant, Michael A., Cram, Dominic, Thompson, Faye J.
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container_issue 47
container_start_page 29759
container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
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creator Johnstone, Rufus A.
Cant, Michael A.
Cram, Dominic
Thompson, Faye J.
description Collective conflicts among humans are widespread, although often highly destructive. A classic explanation for the prevalence of such warfare in some human societies is leadership by selfserving individuals that reap the benefits of conflict while other members of society pay the costs. Here, we show that leadership of this kind can also explain the evolution of collective violence in certain animal societies. We first extend the classic hawk–dove model of the evolution of animal aggression to consider cases in which a subset of individuals within each group may initiate fights in which all group members become involved. We show that leadership of this kind, when combined with inequalities in the payoffs of fighting, can lead to the evolution of severe intergroup aggression, with negative consequences for population mean fitness. We test our model using long-term data from wild banded mongooses, a species characterized by frequent intergroup conflicts that have very different fitness consequences for male and female group members. The data show that aggressive encounters between groups are initiated by females, who gain fitness benefits from mating with extragroup males in the midst of battle, whereas the costs of fighting are borne chiefly by males. In line with the model predictions, the result is unusually severe levels of intergroup violence. Our findings suggest that the decoupling of leaders from the costs that they incite amplifies the destructive nature of intergroup conflict.
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subjects Aggression
Aggression - psychology
Animals
Behavior Observation Techniques
Behavior, Animal - physiology
Biological Sciences
Competitive Behavior - physiology
Cooperative Behavior
Decoupling
Evolution
Female
Fighting
Fitness
Genetic Fitness
Herpestidae - psychology
Leadership
Male
Males
Model testing
Models, Psychological
Reproductive fitness
Sex Factors
Social Evolution
Violence
Violence - psychology
Warfare
title Exploitative leaders incite intergroup warfare in a social mammal
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