
The sociality-health-fitness nexus: synthesis, conclusions and future directions.
This theme issue has highlighted the links between sociality, health and fitness in a broad range of organisms, and with approaches that include field and captive studies of animals, comparative and meta-analyses, theoretical modelling and clinical and psychological studies of humans. In this concluding chapter, we synthesize the results of these diverse studies into some of the key concepts discussed in this issue, focusing on risks of infectious disease through social contact, the effects of competition in groups on susceptibility to disease, and the integration of sociality into research on life-history trade-offs. Interestingly, the studies in this issue both support pre-existing hypotheses, and in other ways challenge those hypotheses. We focus on unexpected results, including a lack of association between ectoparasites and fitness and weak results from a meta-analysis of the links between dominance rank and immune function, and place these results in a broader context. We also review relevant topics that were not covered fully in this theme issue, including self-medication and sickness behaviours, society-level defences against infectious disease, sexual selection, evolutionary medicine, implications for conservation biology and selective pressures on parasite traits. We conclude by identifying general open questions to stimulate and guide future research on the links between sociality, health and fitness.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Social Behavior
- Sexually Transmitted Diseases
- Sex Preselection
- Models, Biological
- Male
- Humans
- Host-Parasite Interactions
- Health Status
- Genetic Fitness
- Female
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Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Social Behavior
- Sexually Transmitted Diseases
- Sex Preselection
- Models, Biological
- Male
- Humans
- Host-Parasite Interactions
- Health Status
- Genetic Fitness
- Female