RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Cultural transmission, competition for prey, and the evolution of cooperative hunting JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 2022.12.14.520505 DO 10.1101/2022.12.14.520505 A1 Talia Borofsky A1 Marcus W. Feldman A1 Yoav Ram YR 2022 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/12/29/2022.12.14.520505.abstract AB Although cooperative hunting (CH) is widespread among animals, its benefits are unclear. When rare, CH may allow predators to escape competition and access “big prey” (BP). However, a lone CH predator cannot such catch food. Cultural transmission may allow CH to spread fast enough that cooperators can find hunting partners, but competition for BP may increase. We construct a one-predator, two-prey model in which the predators either learn to hunt “small prey” (SP) alone, or learn to hunt BP cooperatively. The predators first learn vertically and then choose partners from which they learn horizontally with probability H. CH predators only catch the BP if their partner is cooperative. We find that without horizontal learning, CH cannot evolve when initially rare. Together, a high probability of horizontal learning and competition for the SP allow CH to evolve. However, CH can only fix in the predator population if the BP is very abundant. Furthermore, a mutant that increases horizontal learning can invade whenever CH is present but not fixed, because horizontal learning allows predators to match their strategies, avoiding the situation in which a cooperator cannot find a partner. While competition for prey is important for determining the degree of CH that evolves, it is not enough for CH to emerge and spread; horizontal cultural transmission is essential. Future models may explore factors that control how horizontal transmission influences cooperative predation, and vice versa. Lessons from our model may be useful in conservation efforts and wildlife reintroduction programs.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.