Demography and the tragedy of the commons
Steven A. Frank

TL;DR
This paper explores how demography, alongside kin selection, influences the evolution of cooperation in group-structured populations by affecting group success over multiple generations.
Contribution
It introduces demographic factors as a key mechanism that can mitigate the tragedy of the commons, complementing kin selection in promoting cooperation.
Findings
Demography can modulate group success and cooperation over generations.
Time-dependent benefits of cooperation can enhance natural selection for social behavior.
Both kin selection and demography are essential for understanding social evolution.
Abstract
Individual success in group-structured populations has two components. First, an individual gains by outcompeting its neighbors for local resources. Second, an individual's share of group success must be weighted by the total productivity of the group. The essence of sociality arises from the tension between selfish gains against neighbors and the associated loss that selfishness imposes by degrading the efficiency of the group. Without some force to modulate selfishness, the natural tendencies of self interest typically degrade group performance to the detriment of all. This is the tragedy of the commons. Kin selection provides the most widely discussed way in which the tragedy is overcome in biology. Kin selection arises from behavioral associations within groups caused either by genetical kinship or by other processes that correlate the behaviors of group members. Here, I emphasize…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Evolutionary Psychology and Human Behavior
