Author:
Schmid Max,Rueffler Claus,Lehmann Laurent,Mullon Charles
Abstract
AbstractIn patch- or habitat-structured populations different processes can lead to diversity at different scales. While spatial heterogeneity generates spatially disruptive selection favoring variation between patches, local competition can lead to locally disruptive selection promoting variation within patches. So far, almost all theory has studied these two processes in isolation. Here, we use mathematical modelling to investigate how resource variation within and between habitats influences the evolution of variation in a consumer population where individuals compete in finite patches connected by dispersal. We find that locally and spatially disruptive selection typically act in concert, favoring polymorphism under a significantly wider range of conditions than when in isolation. But when patches are small and dispersal between them is low, kin competition inhibits the emergence of polymorphism, especially when driven by local competition. We further use our model to clarify what comparisons between trait and neutral genetic differentiation (Qst/Fst comparisons) can tell about the nature of selection. Overall, our results help understand the interaction between two major drivers of diversity: locally and spatially disruptive selection; and how this interaction is modulated by the unavoidable effects of kin selection under limited dispersal.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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