Social behaviour garners broad interest: biologists, social scientists, psychologists and economists all incorporate a consideration of social behaviour in their studies. This breadth of interest is unsurprising, as the vast majority of animals (and all that reproduce sexually) live partly (or fully) in social environments. As Robert Trivers (1985) succinctly put it, ‘Everybody has a social life.’ Some of this interest undoubtedly emerges because members of our own species (Homo sapiens) live in extensive societies and spend much time interacting with each other. Yet you do not have to be human for social behaviour to have a strong influence on biological processes. The significance of social behaviour is easy to see: if you isolate an ant,...