Risky Business: Sexual and Asexual Reproduction in Variable Environments
β Scribed by Arthur J. Robson; Carl T. Bergstrom; Jonathan K. Pritchard
- Book ID
- 102610371
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 205 KB
- Volume
- 197
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5193
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Patterns of reproductive uncertainty can have an important influence on population
dynamics. There is a crucial distinction between what we describe here as aggregate uncertainty (in which reproductive output in each generation is correlated among the individuals in a population) and idiosyncratic risk (in which reproductive output is independent across individuals). All else being equal, populations experiencing idiosyncratic risk enjoy a higher asymptotic growth rate than do those experiencing aggregate uncertainty. Therefore individuals in populations of the former type will have a competitive advantage over individuals in populations of the latter type. Applying this distinction to models of randomly fluctuating environments, we point out that genetic variation among offspring can serve to reduce aggregate uncertainty, transforming it into a more idiosyncratic form of risk. We show tht this transformation underlies the dynamics observed in several previous models of the role of outcrossing in the evolution of sex.
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A salinity dependent mictic response was observed in a clone of Brachionus plicatilis cultured in the 2 to 4%0 salinity range. This response was related to asexual exponential reproduction rates (G) and could be divided into three categories: (a) no mixis occurred at a salinity of 35%0 S and above,