π¨βπ©βπ§βπ¦ Who Shares Your Genes?
Letβs start with something fun.
Look around your family β your parents, your brothers or sisters, even your cousins.
Guess what?
You all share a lot of the same genes.
In fact:
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You get half your genes from your mom
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And the other half from your dad
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Your brother or sister has the same setup
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Even your cousins have some of your familyβs genes
So your family is a gene-sharing team.
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𧬠Why Does This Matter?
Letβs say youβre a gene.
You want to stay safe.
You want to get copied.
But what if you canβt?
Maybe the body youβre in is in trouble.
But if your cousin survivesβ¦ and has childrenβ¦ and you share some genesβ¦
Then part of you still gets copied.
Helping your family = helping your own genes stay in the world.
This is called kin selection.
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πΆ A Geneβs Secret Strategy
Hereβs how it works:
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A gene shows up that makes someone care for their siblings
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That caring helps the sibling stay safe and grow up
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The sibling passes on shared genes
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That helpful gene gets copied β because it helped a shared gene
Even though the gene was βkind,β
it was also selfish β because it helped itself through others.
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π§ So Why Do We Love Family?
Because it helps our genes.
When we care for:
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Babies
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Parents
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Siblings
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Cousins
Weβre often doing things that protect our shared genes.
Even animals do this.
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π Animal Families Do It Too!
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Elephants protect each other in herds
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Lions help feed the cubs of their group
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Birds may help raise their siblings even before having babies of their own
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Ants and bees work for the queen β who shares their genes!
So genes can βchooseβ kindness β but only when it helps more copies of themselves survive.
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π§ Recap
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Families share lots of the same genes
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Helping your family can help your own genes get copied
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This is called kin selection
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Animals help family members too
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Genes can act βkindβ β when it helps them survive through others