The Effects of Intraspecific Competition and Stabilizing Selection on a Polygenic TraitThis article is dedicated to the memory of Sasha Gimelfarb, who died May 11, 2004.
- 1 July 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Genetics
- Vol. 167 (3), 1425-1443
- https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.103.018986
Abstract
The equilibrium properties of an additive multilocus model of a quantitative trait under frequency- and density-dependent selection are investigated. Two opposing evolutionary forces are assumed to act: (i) stabilizing selection on the trait, which favors genotypes with an intermediate phenotype, and (ii) intraspecific competition mediated by that trait, which favors genotypes whose effect on the trait deviates most from that of the prevailing genotypes. Accordingly, fitnesses of genotypes have a frequency-independent component describing stabilizing selection and a frequency- and density-dependent component modeling competition. We study how the equilibrium structure, in particular, number, degree of polymorphism, and genetic variance of stable equilibria, is affected by the strength of frequency dependence, and what role the number of loci, the amount of recombination, and the demographic parameters play. To this end, we employ a statistical and numerical approach, complemented by analytical results, and explore how the equilibrium properties averaged over a large number of genetic systems with a given number of loci and average amount of recombination depend on the ecological and demographic parameters. We identify two parameter regions with a transitory region in between, in which the equilibrium properties of genetic systems are distinctively different. These regions depend on the strength of frequency dependence relative to pure stabilizing selection and on the demographic parameters, but not on the number of loci or the amount of recombination. We further study the shape of the fitness function observed at equilibrium and the extent to which the dynamics in this model are adaptive, and we present examples of equilibrium distributions of genotypic values under strong frequency dependence. Consequences for the maintenance of genetic variation, the detection of disruptive selection, and models of sympatric speciation are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nonsynonymous polymorphisms and frequency-dependent selectionPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2004
- PERSPECTIVE: MODELS OF SPECIATION: WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED IN 40 YEARS?Evolution, 2003
- On a Genetic Model of Intraspecific Competition and Stabilizing SelectionThe American Naturalist, 2002
- Long-term Buildup of Reproductive Isolation Promoted by Disruptive Selection: How Far Does it Go?Selection, 2002
- Disruptive selection and the genetic basis of bill size polymorphism in the African finch PyrenestesNature, 1993
- On Conditions for Evolutionary Stability for a Continuously Varying CharacterThe American Naturalist, 1991
- Natural Selection on Bill Characters in the Two Bill Morphs of the African Finch Pyrenestes ostrinusEvolution, 1990
- A model of quantitative traits under frequency-dependent balancing selectionProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1990
- The maintenance of polygenic variation through a balance between mutation and stabilizing selectionGenetics Research, 1986
- Density-Dependent Selection and Character DisplacementThe American Naturalist, 1974