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Mom was right: Nice Guys don’t always finish
last
Newswise — 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.”
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