Stochastic dynamics of adaptive trait and neutral marker driven by eco-evolutionary feedbacks
Authored by Sylvie Meleard, Chi Tran Viet, Sylvain Billiard, Regis Ferriere
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1007/s00285-014-0847-y
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
How the neutral diversity is affected by selection and adaptation is
investigated in an eco-evolutionary framework. In our model, we study a
finite population in continuous time, where each individual is
characterized by a trait under selection and a completely linked neutral
marker. Population dynamics are driven by births and deaths, mutations
at birth, and competition between individuals. Trait values influence
ecological processes (demographic events, competition), and competition
generates selection on trait variation, thus closing the
eco-evolutionary feedback loop. The demographic effects of the trait are
also expected to influence the generation and maintenance of neutral
variation. We consider a large population limit with rare mutation, under the assumption that the neutral marker mutates faster than the
trait under selection. We prove the convergence of the stochastic
individual-based process to a new measure-valued diffusive process with
jumps that we call Substitution Fleming-Viot Process (SFVP). When
restricted to the trait space this process is the Trait Substitution
Sequence first introduced by Metz et al. (1996). During the invasion of
a favorable mutation, a genetical bottleneck occurs and the marker
associated with this favorable mutant is hitchhiked. By rigorously
analysing the hitchhiking effect and how the neutral diversity is
restored afterwards, we obtain the condition for a time-scale
separation; under this condition, we show that the marker distribution
is approximated by a Fleming-Viot distribution between two trait
substitutions. We discuss the implications of the SFVP for our
understanding of the dynamics of neutral variation under
eco-evolutionary feedbacks and illustrate the main phenomena with
simulations. Our results highlight the joint importance of mutations, ecological parameters, and trait values in the restoration of neutral
diversity after a selective sweep.
Tags
Adaptation
selection
diffusion
Age-structured populations
Genetic hitchhiking
Phenotypic models
Locus
Alleles