Adaptation enables natural populations to survive in a changing environment. Understanding the mechanics of adaptation is therefore crucial for learning about the evolution and ecology of natural populations. We focus on the impact of random sweepstakes on selection in highly fecund haploid and diploid populations partitioned into two genetic types, with one type conferring selective advantage. For the diploid populations, we incorporate various dominance mechanisms. We assume that the populations may experience recurrent bottlenecks. In random sweepstakes, the distribution of individual recruitment success is highly skewed, resulting in a huge variance in the number of offspring contributed by the individuals present in any given generation. Using computer simulations, we investigate the joint effects of random sweepstakes, recurrent bottlenecks and dominance mechanisms on selection. In our framework, bottlenecks allow random sweepstakes to have an effect on the time to fixation, and in diploid populations, the effect of random sweepstakes depends on the dominance mechanism. We describe selective sweepstakes that are approximated by recurrent sweeps of strongly beneficial allelic types arising by mutation. We demonstrate that both types of sweepstakes reproduction may facilitate rapid adaptation (as defined based on the average time to fixation of a type conferring selective advantage conditioned on fixation of the type). However, whether random sweepstakes cause rapid adaptation depends also on their interactions with bottlenecks and dominance mechanisms. Finally, we review a case study in which a model of recurrent sweeps is shown to essentially explain population genomic data from Atlantic cod.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.16903 | DOI Listing |
Mol Ecol
May 2024
Department of Biology, University of Munich, Munich, Germany.
Adaptation enables natural populations to survive in a changing environment. Understanding the mechanics of adaptation is therefore crucial for learning about the evolution and ecology of natural populations. We focus on the impact of random sweepstakes on selection in highly fecund haploid and diploid populations partitioned into two genetic types, with one type conferring selective advantage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
February 2023
Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin, Germany.
Highly fecund natural populations characterized by high early mortality abound, yet our knowledge about their recruitment dynamics is somewhat rudimentary. This knowledge gap has implications for our understanding of genetic variation, population connectivity, local adaptation, and the resilience of highly fecund populations. The concept of sweepstakes reproductive success, which posits a considerable variance and skew in individual reproductive output, is key to understanding the distribution of individual reproductive success.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNicotine Tob Res
October 2022
Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, 624 North Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Introduction: Receptivity to tobacco advertising is an important component in the progression from exposure to advertising to use behavior, yet little is known about current tobacco advertising tactics that increase receptivity. This study tests the effect of three advertising features identified in earlier work as potentially appealing to adolescents and young adults: flora imagery, eco-friendly language, and sweepstakes.
Aims And Methods: We conducted an online survey in which 1,000 US adolescents (age 15-17) and 1,000 US young adults (age 18-24), equally stratified by smoking status, were exposed to three experimental modules manipulating presence/absence of each feature of interest on cigarette ads.
Nicotine Tob Res
August 2021
Department of Family Medicine and Public Health, University of California San Diego School of Medicine, La Jolla, CA, USA.
Introduction: Cigarette advertising is a causal agent of smoking uptake among young people. Although prior research links ad receptivity to tobacco product interest and use, little is known regarding the specific advertising tactics associated with increased product appeal among young people.
Methods: A national sample of 13-20 year-olds (N = 3688, youth) and 21-24 year-olds (N = 1556, young adults) in the US participated in an online survey in 2017 (mean age 18.
JAMA Netw Open
October 2020
Department of Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Importance: Financial incentives can improve medication adherence and cardiovascular disease risk, but the optimal design to promote sustained adherence after incentives are discontinued is unknown.
Objective: To determine whether 6-month interventions involving different financial incentives to encourage statin adherence reduce low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) levels from baseline to 12 months.
Design, Setting, And Participants: This 4-group, randomized clinical trial was conducted from August 2013 to July 2018 among several large US insurer or employer populations and the University of Pennsylvania Health System.
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