Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Introduction: The uphill climb of sociobiology: towards a new synthesis
- Profile: Undiminished passion
- Part I Foundations
- Part II Themes
- 7 Aggression: towards an integration of gene, brain and behaviour
- Profile: From behavioural observations, to genes, to evolution
- 8 Social influences on communication signals: from honesty to exploitation
- Profile: Reputation can make the world go round – or why we are sometimes social
- 9 Important topics in group living
- Profile: A haphazard career
- 10 Sexual behaviour: conflict, cooperation and coevolution
- Profile: In celebration of questions, past, present and future
- 11 Pair bonds and parental behaviour
- Profile: Mating systems and genetic variation
- 12 Adaptations and constraints in the evolution of delayed dispersal: implications for cooperation
- Profile: Selections from a life in social selection
- 13 Social behaviour in microorganisms
- Profile: The de novo evolution of cooperation: an unlikely event
- 14 Social environments, social tactics and their fitness consequences in complex mammalian societies
- Profile: Evolutionary genetics and social behaviour: changed perspectives on sexual coevolution
- 15 Social behaviour in humans
- Profile: Genes and social behaviour: from gene to genome to 1000 genomes
- Part III Implications
- Species index
- Subject index
- References
Profile: The de novo evolution of cooperation: an unlikely event
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Introduction: The uphill climb of sociobiology: towards a new synthesis
- Profile: Undiminished passion
- Part I Foundations
- Part II Themes
- 7 Aggression: towards an integration of gene, brain and behaviour
- Profile: From behavioural observations, to genes, to evolution
- 8 Social influences on communication signals: from honesty to exploitation
- Profile: Reputation can make the world go round – or why we are sometimes social
- 9 Important topics in group living
- Profile: A haphazard career
- 10 Sexual behaviour: conflict, cooperation and coevolution
- Profile: In celebration of questions, past, present and future
- 11 Pair bonds and parental behaviour
- Profile: Mating systems and genetic variation
- 12 Adaptations and constraints in the evolution of delayed dispersal: implications for cooperation
- Profile: Selections from a life in social selection
- 13 Social behaviour in microorganisms
- Profile: The de novo evolution of cooperation: an unlikely event
- 14 Social environments, social tactics and their fitness consequences in complex mammalian societies
- Profile: Evolutionary genetics and social behaviour: changed perspectives on sexual coevolution
- 15 Social behaviour in humans
- Profile: Genes and social behaviour: from gene to genome to 1000 genomes
- Part III Implications
- Species index
- Subject index
- References
Summary
My interest in the evolution of diversity in microbial populations began more than 20 years ago. For the first 10 of those years I was oblivious to the fact that one of the most dramatic forms to emerge during the course of selection experiments, the so-named wrinkly spreader (WS) type, owed its success to cooperation among individual cells. Rather ashamedly, despite having recognised the novelty of what I had witnessed, it took me another 10 years to get round to publishing this work. Perhaps, however, an attempt to publish in the early 1990s, in the absence of studies that gave credibility to the microcosm experiments (see Chapter 13), would have met with limited success.
There was no eureka moment of realisation, although with hindsight there ought to have been. I was aware that WS genotypes formed cellular mats that grew at the air–liquid interface of broth-filled microcosms (Rainey & Travisano 1998). I was also aware that the ability to occupy the air–liquid interface was the secret of their evolutionary success (the broth phase rapidly become anaerobic due to microbial growth). Most tellingly, I was aware that the mats sank into the broth when they became old and heavy.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Social BehaviourGenes, Ecology and Evolution, pp. 357 - 359Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010