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Steep Hierarchies without Skew? Modeling How Ecology and Decision-Making Shape Despotism of Relationships

  • Marcy S. Ekanayake-Weber
  • , Christopher J. O’connor-Coates
  • , Andreas Koenig
  • Stony Brook University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Animals can form dominance relationships that vary from highly unequal, or despotic, to egalitarian, and this variation likely impacts the fitness of individuals. How and why these differences in relationships and fitness exist among groups, populations, and species has been the subject of much debate. Here, we investigated the influence of two major factors: (1) spatial resource distribution and (2) the presence or absence of winner-loser effects. To determine the effects of these factors, we built an agent-based model that represented 10 agents directly competing over food resources on a simple land-scape. By varying the food distribution and using either asymmetry of strength or experience, we contrasted four scenarios from which we recorded attack decisions, fight outcomes, and individual energy intake to calculate dominance hierarchy steepness and energetic skew. Surprisingly, resource distribution and winner-loser effects did not have the predicted effects on hierarchy steepness. However, skew in energy intake arose when resources were distributed heterogeneously, despite hierarchy steepness frequently being higher in the homoge-neous resource scenarios. Thus, this study confirms some decades-old predictions about feeding competition but also casts doubt on the ability to infer energetic consequences from observations of agonistic interactions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)189-203
Number of pages15
JournalAmerican Naturalist
Volume203
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2024

Keywords

  • agent-based model
  • agonism
  • dominance hierarchy
  • egalitarian
  • feeding competition
  • resource distribution

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