The stationary distribution of a continuously varying strategy in a class-structured population under mutation-selection-drift balance.


Autoria(s): Lehmann L.
Data(s)

2012

Resumo

Many traits and/or strategies expressed by organisms are quantitative phenotypes. Because populations are of finite size and genomes are subject to mutations, these continuously varying phenotypes are under the joint pressure of mutation, natural selection and random genetic drift. This article derives the stationary distribution for such a phenotype under a mutation-selection-drift balance in a class-structured population allowing for demographically varying class sizes and/or changing environmental conditions. The salient feature of the stationary distribution is that it can be entirely characterized in terms of the average size of the gene pool and Hamilton's inclusive fitness effect. The exploration of the phenotypic space varies exponentially with the cumulative inclusive fitness effect over state space, which determines an adaptive landscape. The peaks of the landscapes are those phenotypes that are candidate evolutionary stable strategies and can be determined by standard phenotypic selection gradient methods (e.g. evolutionary game theory, kin selection theory, adaptive dynamics). The curvature of the stationary distribution provides a measure of the stability by convergence of candidate evolutionary stable strategies, and it is evaluated explicitly for two biological scenarios: first, a coordination game, which illustrates that, for a multipeaked adaptive landscape, stochastically stable strategies can be singled out by letting the size of the gene pool grow large; second, a sex-allocation game for diploids and haplo-diploids, which suggests that the equilibrium sex ratio follows a Beta distribution with parameters depending on the features of the genetic system.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_8D290828E8E8

isbn:1420-9101 (Electronic)

pmid:22372617

doi:10.1111/j.1420-9101.2012.02472.x

isiid:000301528100016

http://my.unil.ch/serval/document/BIB_8D290828E8E8.pdf

http://nbn-resolving.org/urn/resolver.pl?urn=urn:nbn:ch:serval-BIB_8D290828E8E86

Idioma(s)

en

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Journal of Evolutionary Biology, vol. 25, no. 4, pp. 770-787

Palavras-Chave #Animals; Biological Evolution; Game Theory; Genetic Drift; Genetics, Population; Models, Genetic; Mutation; Selection, Genetic
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article