Despite the fact that grouping behavior has been actively studied for over a
century, the relative importance of the numerous proposed fitness benefits of
grouping remain unclear. We use a digital model of evolving prey under
simulated predation to directly explore the evolution of gregarious foraging
behavior according to one such benefit, the "many eyes" hypothesis. According
to this hypothesis, collective vigilance allows prey in large groups to detect
predators more efficiently by making alarm signals or behavioral cues to each
other, thereby allowing individuals within the group to spend more time
foraging. Here, we find that collective vigilance is sufficient to select for
gregarious foraging behavior as long there is not a direct cost for grouping
(e.g., competition for limited food resources), even when controlling for
confounding factors such as the dilution effect. Further, we explore the role
of the genetic relatedness and reproductive strategy of the prey, and find that
highly related groups of prey with a semelparous reproductive strategy are the
most likely to evolve gregarious foraging behavior mediated by the benefit of
vigilance. These findings, combined with earlier studies with evolving digital
organisms, further sharpen our understanding of the factors favoring grouping
behavior.Comment: 26 pages (double-spaced, single column), 6 figures, 2 SI figure