Evolution of discrete populations and the canonical diffusion of adaptive dynamics

被引:47
作者
Champagnat, Nicolas
Lambert, Amaury
机构
[1] Weierstr Inst Appl Anal & Stochast, D-10117 Berlin, Germany
[2] Ecole Normale Super, UMR 7625, Ecol Lab, Unit Math Evolut Biol, F-75230 Paris 05, France
[3] Univ Paris 06, UMR 7625, Ecol Lab, F-75252 Paris 05, France
关键词
logistic branching process; multitype birth death competition process; population dynamics; density-dependence; competition; fixation probability; genetic drift; weak selection; adaptive dynamics; invasion fitness; timescale separation; trait substitution sequence; diffusion approximation; harmonic equations; convergence of measure-valued processes;
D O I
10.1214/105051606000000628
中图分类号
O21 [概率论与数理统计]; C8 [统计学];
学科分类号
020208 ; 070103 ; 0714 ;
摘要
The biological theory of adaptive dynamics proposes a description of the long-term evolution of a structured asexual population. It is based on the assumptions of large population, rare mutations and small mutation steps, that lead to a deterministic ODE describing the evolution of the dominant type, called the "canonical equation of adaptive dynamics." Here, in order to include the effect of stochasticity (genetic drift), we consider self-regulated randomly fluctuating populations subject to mutation, so that the number of coexisting types may fluctuate. We apply a limit of rare mutations to these populations, while keeping the population size finite. This leads to a jump process, the so-called "trait substitution sequence," where evolution proceeds by successive invasions and fixations of mutant types. Then we apply a limit of small mutation steps (weak selection) to this jump process, that leads to a diffusion process that we call the "canonical diffusion of adaptive dynamics," in which genetic drift is combined with directional selection driven by the gradient of the fixation probability, also interpreted as an invasion fitness. Finally, we study in detail the particular case of multitype logistic branching populations and seek explicit formulae for the invasion fitness of a mutant deviating slightly from the resident type. In particular, second-order terms of the fixation probability are products of functions of the initial mutant frequency, times functions of the initial total population size, called the invasibility coefficients of the resident by increased fertility, defence, aggressiveness, isolation or survival.
引用
收藏
页码:102 / 155
页数:54
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