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Volatile Chemical Emission as a Weapon of Rearguard Action: A Game-Theoretic Model of Contest Behavior
Authors:Mike Mesterton-Gibbons  Yao Dai  Marlène Goubault  Ian C W Hardy
Institution:1.Department of Mathematics,Florida State University,Tallahassee,USA;2.Institut de Recherche sur la Biologie de l’Insecte,UMR 7261 CNRS - Université Fran?ois-Rabelais de Tours, UFR des Sciences et Techniques,Tours,France;3.School of Biosciences,University of Nottingham,Loughborough,UK
Abstract:We use a game-theoretic model to explore whether volatile chemical (spiroacetal) emissions can serve as a weapon of rearguard action. Our basic model explores whether such emissions serve as a means of temporary withdrawal, preventing the winner of the current round of a contest from translating its victory into permanent possession of a contested resource. A variant of this model explores an alternative possibility, namely, that such emissions serve as a means of permanent retreat, attempting to prevent a winner from inflicting costs on a fleeing loser. Our results confirm that the underlying logic of either interpretation of weapons of rearguard action is sound; however, empirical observations on parasitoid wasp contests suggest that the more likely function of chemical weapons is to serve as a means of temporary withdrawal. While our work is centered around the particular biology of contest behavior in parasitoid wasps, it also provides the first contest model to explicitly consider self-inflicted damage costs and thus responds to a recent call by empiricists for theory in this area.
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