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Excited to share this blog and our recent paper! We modelled termite colonies, which seem to produce altruistic soldiers that help non-kin in fused groups. We show that colonies might benefit from this soldier production under certain conditions if we think of it as a collective investment game ♟️🪳
8d
Super excited to be able to share this! I have written a little blog post explaining what we found and how the mongooses inspired our model 🐻 -- beckypadget.github.io/posts/reward...
16d
Becky Padget
Becky Padget
Photo by Audric Wonkam on Unsplash Rewards for public goods Animals in groups…
beckypadget.github.io
How rewards can promote public goods production (but also free riding) @ SociaNatura
📢Out now in #ProcB our NEW paper on how #reward inequity can promote production of #publicgoods and #free-riding 👏Congratulations @beckypadget.bsky.social as lead author 👥With #AndyHigginson @royalsocietypublishing.org @bristolbiosci.bsky.social @crab-exeter.bsky.social doi.org/10.1098/rspb...
22d
Abstract. When animals in groups cooperate, individuals sometimes produce a ‘public’ good that benefits many or all group members and receive a private rew
Reward inequity can promote both public goods production and free riding
doi.org
Andy Radford
Sharing the cost? Soldier investment following colony fusion in basal termites - Insectes Sociaux
In most cooperative animal societies, interactions between groups are hostile or antagonistic. However, in a few species, groups that encounter each other can fuse together to form a new functional collective. In some ants and termites, such fusion events can be followed by changes in investment in soldiers and reproductives, for reasons that are poorly understood. Here we use a theoretical model to investigate optimal allocation to soldiers following colony fusion. Each colony can invest a proportion of its membership into the soldier caste, which provides a public benefit for the whole two-colony collective but comes at a cost to the investing colony by limiting colony growth and therefore reproduction. Our model predicts that soldier investment will typically decrease following colony fusion. However, the reported post-fusion soldier investment from empirical studies could be explained if the cost of soldier production falls following fusion. The model predicts that a colony’s reproductive output will typically decline as a result of fusion, unless the other colony makes a greater investment, or the cost of soldiers decreases sufficiently. Finally, our model predicts that smaller colonies will produce fewer soldiers than larger colonies after fusion because their lower average relatedness to the rest of the collective makes each soldier less beneficial; this means that smaller groups might, under certain conditions, gain from fusing with larger groups. Our results demonstrate two potential pathways to the evolution of group fusion in the lower termites – exploitation of additional resources or exploitation of additional soldiers (or potentially other workers). Within-group conflict, not considered in our model, may explain some discrepancies between our model and empirical reports.
bit.ly
Colony fusion - an inclusive fitness conundrum 🪵 In this blog, beckypadget.bsky.social explores why do some colonies merge with unrelated neighbours despite what evolutionary theory predicts. insectessociaux.wordpress.com/2026/06/03/c... #SocialInsects #Evolution #AnimalBehavior #Ecology
9d
Insectes Sociaux
By Rebecca Padget, a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Bristol using modelling inspired by cool animal systems to understand how and why animals cooperate in groups. Her latest w…
insectessociaux.wordpress.com
Colony fusion – an inclusive fitness conundrum