Reciprocal altruism, rather than kin selection, maintains nepotistic food transfers on an Ache reservation☆
Received 9 December 2006; accepted 24 March 2008. published online 12 June 2008.
Abstract
Cooperation among relatives is often regarded as evidence of kin selection. Yet altruism not requiring shared genes can also evolve among relatives. If characteristics of relatives (such as proximity, familiarity, or trust) make kin preferred social partners, the primary causes of nepotistic biases may reside principally in direct fitness payoffs from cooperation rather than indirect fitness payoffs acquired from aiding collateral kin. We consider the roles of kin selection and reciprocal altruism in maintaining nepotistic food transfers on an Ache reservation in northeastern Paraguay. Households do not primarily direct aid to related households that receive larger comparative marginal gains from food intake as we would predict under kin selection theory. Instead, (1) food transfers favor households characterized by lower relative net energy production values irrespective of kinship ties, (2) households display significant positive correlations in amounts exchanged with each other, suggesting contingency in food transfers, and (3) kinship interacts with these positive correlations in amounts households exchange with each other, indicating even stronger contingency in sharing among related households than among unrelated households. While kin are preferred recipients of food aid, food distributions favor kin that have given more to the distributing household in the past rather than kin that would benefit more from the aid. Such discrimination among kin accords better with reciprocal altruism theory than with kin selection theory.
aDepartment of Anthropology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA
bDepartment of Anthropology, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA
cSchool of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA
Corresponding author.
☆ The National Science Foundation (grant no. 9617692), L. S. B. Leakey Foundation, University of New Mexico Student Research Allocations Committee, and University of New Mexico Office of Graduate Studies Research Project and Travel grants provided support for this research and its dissemination.