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WHAT CAN INVASION ANALYSES TELL US ABOUT EVOLUTION UNDER STOCHASTICITY IN FINITE POPULATIONS?
Proulx, S.R., and Day, T.Selection:Molecules, Genes, Memes, 2001. 2:2-15
Abstract
The geometric mean of fitness is
considered to be the main indicator of
evolutionary change in stochastic models.
However, this measure was initially
derived for models with infinite
population sizes, where the long-term
evolutionary behavior can be described
with certainty. In this paper we begin an
exploration of the limitations and utility
of this approach to evolution in finite
populations and discuss alternate methods
for predicting evolutionary dynamics. We
reanalyze a model of lottery competition
under environmental stochasticity by
including population finiteness, and show
that the geometric mean predictions do not
always agree with those based on the
fixation probability of rare alleles.
Further, the fixation probability can be
inserted into adaptive dynamics equations
to derive the mean state of the
population. We explore the effects of
increasing population size on these
conclusions through simulations. These
simulations show that for small population
sizes the fixation probability accurately
predicts the course of evolution, but as
population size becomes large the
geometric mean predictions are upheld. The
two approaches are reconciled because the
time scale on which the fixation
probability approach applies becomes very
large as population size grows.
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