Invasion and adaptive evolution for individual-based spatially structured populations
Authored by Nicolas Champagnat, Sylvie Meleard
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1007/s00285-007-0072-z
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The interplay between space and evolution is an important issue in
population dynamics, that is particularly crucial in the emergence of
polymorphism and spatial patterns. Recently, biological studies suggest
that invasion and evolution are closely related. Here, we model the
interplay between space and evolution starting with an individual-based
approach and show the important role of parameter scalings on clustering
and invasion. We consider a stochastic discrete model with birth, death, competition, mutation and spatial diffusion, where all the parameters
may depend both on the position and on the phenotypic trait of
individuals. The spatial motion is driven by a reflected diffusion in a
bounded domain. The interaction is modelled as a trait competition
between individuals within a given spatial interaction range. First, we
give an algorithmic construction of the process. Next, we obtain large
population approximations, as weak solutions of nonlinear
reaction-diffusion equations. As the spatial interaction range is fixed, the nonlinearity is nonlocal. Then, we make the interaction range
decrease to zero and prove the convergence to spatially localized
nonlinear reaction-diffusion equations. Finally, a discussion of three
concrete examples is proposed, based on simulations of the microscopic
individual-based model. These examples illustrate the strong effects of
the spatial interaction range on the emergence of spatial and phenotypic
diversity (clustering and polymorphism) and on the interplay between
invasion and evolution. The simulations focus on the qualitative
differences between local and nonlocal interactions.
Tags
models
Dynamics
speciation
stability
Branching-processes
Weak-convergence
Moment equations
Euler scheme