- Top-level Research at UH
- UH at the university rankings
- Research ethics
- Graduate schools at the UH
- UH's national graduate schools
- Award-winning researchers and research teams
- Centres of Excellence
- The Nordic Centres of Excellence
- Research funded by ERC
- Evaluations Ensure Quality within the University
- International Evaluation Of Research And Doctoral Training
Knowledge databases
Search the research database Tuhat:
News of the week
Week 51 / 2004: Competition between species curbs selfishness?
Animals are in constant competition over procreative resources.
The interests of the individual and the population are not necessarily
one and the same; aggressive insects may fare well in the mating
competition, but eventually the proliferation of aggressive genes
will weaken the procreative efficiency of the species.
Species differ, however, in how co-operative or selfish they are. Hanna Kokko, Professor of Animal Ecology, says that, for example, the Australian white-winged chough survive in arid areas by feeding their nestlings collaboratively.
Kokko says it is possible that the ways conflicts are solved effect the survival of species. It has been suggested based on North American bird counts, for example, that colourful species, which probably compete more aggressively over females, become locally extinct more often than others.
“New mathematical simulations support this,” Kokko says. “If the selfish fight within a species weakens the competitiveness of a population in the competition between species over resources, the ecosystem will eventually balance itself.” This way, evolution will not lead to the accumulation of characteristics that are the most selfish and detrimental to a species.”
“Conflicts within existing species are perhaps milder than imaginable. This opens an opportunity for the evolution of co-operation. If competition between species really limits the proliferation of selfish genes, species that are more common or widely spread should be less selfish than rare species.
Hanna Kokko talked about co-operation, collisions of interests and conflicts in her inaugural lecture on 8 December 2004.
Text: Liisa Voutilainen
Photo: Hanna Kokko
www.helsinki.fi/digitalcommunications
Translation: Valtasana Oy
Research at the faculties:
- Agriculture and
Forestry »» - Arts »»
- Behavioural
Sciences »» - Biosciences »»
- Law »»
- Medicine »»
- Pharmacy »»
- Science »»
- Social Sciences »»
- Theology »»
- Veterinary Medicine »»