Group living, competition, and the evolution of cooperation in a sessile invertebrate

Science. 1981 Aug 28;213(4511):1012-4. doi: 10.1126/science.213.4511.1012.

Abstract

Competition and cooperation are thought to represent the opposite extremes of organism interactions. I here show that the formation of aggregations in a sessile organism requires cooperation between individuals and that the gregarious pattern of habitat selection generating these aggregations is a response to a density dependence in the outcome of interference competition.