AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how natural selection could lead to the development of attachment within monogamous pair bonds, defining attachment as a factor that lowers the likelihood of divorce as the relationship lengthens.
  • It posits that individuals in longer-lasting pairs are more likely to find higher-quality reproductive opportunities, which can influence their decisions about staying together or splitting up.
  • The research suggests that attachment is more likely to evolve under certain conditions, such as high survival rates and better assessments of reproductive opportunities, and recommends further examination of pair bonds as dynamic relationships.

Article Abstract

AbstractWhether natural selection leads to attachment in monogamous pair bonds has seldom been addressed. Operationally defining attachment as a behavioral modifier that decreases divorce probability with pair duration, we develop a model for the evolution of attachment. If divorce (the ending of a pair bond when both individuals survive to the next breeding season) is more likely to occur out of poor-quality reproductive opportunities (i.e., poor territory or low-quality mate), individuals in experienced pairs are more likely to be found in high-quality opportunities. Consequently, when divorce decisions occur using imperfect information from reproductive success, pair duration provides individuals with information about the quality of their reproductive opportunity and attachment can evolve. We show that high survival rates, divorce propensities, and probabilities of nest failure favor the evolution of attachment. Attachment is also more likely to evolve when individuals can directly assess the quality of their reproductive opportunity (as opposed to relying on imperfect information from reproductive success), when the quality of the reproductive opportunity has adult survival ramifications, and when divorce coevolves with attachment. We show that our core conclusions are robust to a variety of assumptions using individual-based simulations. Our results clarify how attachment can be adaptive and suggest that studying pair bonds as dynamic entities is a promising avenue for future work.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/731671DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

quality reproductive
12
reproductive opportunity
12
attachment
9
pair bonds
8
pair duration
8
evolution attachment
8
imperfect reproductive
8
reproductive success
8
attachment evolve
8
reproductive
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!