A concept in evolution linking survival of the fittest to natural selection. Traits or behavior benefiting the survival of an organism or species will thrive by having an advantage in being passed on to future generations.
The following situations are examples of survival value in action:
In the examples above the behavior or trait in the A group has a higher survival value than group B. This is partially why more people are afraid of snakes than armadillos, male rams headbutt each other for mating rights, and peach trees grow more than just the pits.
Survival value can explain a range of behavior, from many animals' compulsion to run away to die (to save others from infection) to the Coolidge effect to the maternal instinct.
However, evolutionary principles are more intricate than such a general rule; survival value cannot explain everything throughout the history of evolution.
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"Survival value".
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