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Showing papers by "Geoff A. Parker published in 1995"


Journal ArticleDOI
19 Jan 1995-Nature
TL;DR: Punishing strategies are used to establish and maintain dominance relationships, to discourage parasites and cheats, to discipline offspring or prospective sexual partners and to maintain cooperative behaviour.
Abstract: Although positive reciprocity (reciprocal altruism) has been a focus of interest in evolutionary biology, negative reciprocity (retaliatory infliction of fitness reduction) has been largely ignored. In social animals, retaliatory aggression is common, individuals often punish other group members that infringe their interests, and punishment can cause subordinates to desist from behaviour likely to reduce the fitness of dominant animals. Punishing strategies are used to establish and maintain dominance relationships, to discourage parasites and cheats, to discipline offspring or prospective sexual partners and to maintain cooperative behaviour.

901 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a wide range of animal species, males coerce females to mate with them, either physically forcing them to mate, by harassing them until they mate or by punishing persistent refusal to mate as discussed by the authors.

668 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results provide support for the model in a situation where payoffs are density dependent, but fit less well where they are density independent.
Abstract: An evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS) model of scramble effort (for example, foraging speed) in competition for food or mates, where payoff may depend on competitor density, is described. An individual can increase speed (at some energetic cost) to gain a greater share of resources. The predictions are that if food input per competitor is constant (density independence), the ess foraging speed should increase with density, but if food input per patch is constant (density dependence), then the ESS foraging speed should decrease with density. The predictions of this model are tested in an experiment using different densities of cichlid fish, Aequidens portalegrensis , scrambling for food at a discrete resource patch. The results provide support for the model in a situation where payoffs are density dependent, but fit less well where they are density independent.

37 citations