AI Article Synopsis

  • Evolvability refers to a population's ability to generate heritable variations that are relevant for natural selection, influencing individual adaptations and overall fitness.
  • The study models how different species with varying evolvability compete under different environmental conditions, revealing that faster-evolving species do better far from equilibrium, while slower-evolving species succeed when near equilibrium.
  • Environmental changes impact species survival, with frequent minor changes leading to the extinction of smaller populations, yet allowing for coexistence in diverse ecological niches, particularly favoring slower-evolving species.

Article Abstract

Evolvability is the capacity of a population to generate heritable variation that can be acted upon by natural selection. This ability influences the adaptations and fitness of individual organisms. By viewing this capacity as a trait, evolvability is subject to natural selection and thus plays a critical role in eco-evolutionary dynamics. Understanding this role provides insight into how species respond to changes in their environment and how species coexistence can arise and be maintained. Here, we create a G-function model of competing species, each with a different evolvability. We analyze population and strategy (= heritable phenotype) dynamics of the two populations under clade initiation (when species are introduced into a population), evolutionary tracking (constant, small changes in the environment), adaptive radiation (availability of multiple ecological niches), and evolutionary rescue (extreme environmental disturbances). We find that when species are far from an eco-evolutionary equilibrium, faster-evolving species reach higher population sizes, and when species are close to an equilibrium, slower-evolving species are more successful. Frequent, minor environmental changes promote the extinction of species with small population sizes, regardless of their evolvability. When several niches are available for a species to occupy, coexistence is possible, though slower-evolving species perform slightly better than faster-evolving ones due to the well-recognized inherent cost of evolvability. Finally, disrupting the environment at intermediate frequencies can result in coexistence with cyclical population dynamics of species with different rates of evolution.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10565728PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10591DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

species
13
eco-evolutionary dynamics
8
competing species
8
species evolvability
8
natural selection
8
changes environment
8
population sizes
8
slower-evolving species
8
population
6
evolvability
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!