Mutation accumulation in space and the maintenance of sexual reproduction
Authored by Sebastian Bonhoeffer, Marcel Salathe, Rahel Salathe, Paul Schmid-Hempel
Date Published: 2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2006.00942.x
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Platforms:
Java
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Abstract
The maintenance of sexual reproduction remains one of the major puzzles
of evolutionary biology, since, all else being equal, an asexual mutant
should have a twofold fitness advantage over the sexual wildtype. Most
theories suggest that sex helps either to purge deleterious mutations, or to adapt to changing environments. Both mechanisms have their
limitations if they act in isolation because they require either high
genomic mutation rates or very virulent pathogens, and it is therefore
often thought that they must act together to maintain sex. Typically, however, these theories have in common that they are not based on
spatial processes. Here, we show that local dispersal and local
competition can explain the maintenance of sexual reproduction as a
means of purging deleterious mutations. Using a spatially explicit
individual-based model, we find that even with reasonably low genomic
mutation rates and large total population sizes, asexual clones cannot
invade a sexual population. Our results demonstrate how spatial
processes affect mutation accumulation such that it can fully erode the
twofold benefit of asexuality faster than an asexual clone can take over
a sexual population. Thus, the cost of sex is generally overestimated in
models that ignore the effects of space on mutation accumulation.
Tags
Evolution
selection
parasitism
Populations
Deleterious mutations
Recombination
Mullers ratchet