The Fate of Cooperation during Range Expansions

Species expand their geographical ranges following an environmental change, long range dispersal, or a new adaptation. Range expansions not only bring an ecological change, but also affect the evolution of the expanding species. Although the dynamics of deleterious, neutral, and beneficial mutations...

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Main Author: Korolev, Kirill Sergeevich
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: Public Library of Science 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/79824
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author Korolev, Kirill Sergeevich
author2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
author_facet Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
Korolev, Kirill Sergeevich
author_sort Korolev, Kirill Sergeevich
collection MIT
description Species expand their geographical ranges following an environmental change, long range dispersal, or a new adaptation. Range expansions not only bring an ecological change, but also affect the evolution of the expanding species. Although the dynamics of deleterious, neutral, and beneficial mutations have been extensively studied in expanding populations, the fate of alleles under frequency-dependent selection remains largely unexplored. The dynamics of cooperative alleles are particularly interesting because selection can be both frequency and density dependent, resulting in a coupling between population and evolutionary dynamics. This coupling leads to an increase in the frequency of cooperators at the expansion front, and, under certain conditions, the entire front can be taken over by cooperators. Thus, a mixed population wave can split into an expansion wave of only cooperators followed by an invasion wave of defectors. After the splitting, cooperators increase in abundance by expanding into new territories faster than they are invaded by defectors. Our results not only provide an explanation for the maintenance of cooperation but also elucidate the effect of eco-evolutionary feedback on the maintenance of genetic diversity during range expansions. When cooperators do not split away, we find that defectors can spread much faster with cooperators than they would be able to on their own or by invading cooperators. This enhanced rate of expansion in mixed waves could counterbalance the loss of genetic diversity due to the founder effect for mutations under frequency-dependent selection. Although we focus on cooperator-defector interactions, our analysis could also be relevant for other systems described by reaction-diffusion equations.
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spelling mit-1721.1/798242022-09-28T15:35:45Z The Fate of Cooperation during Range Expansions Korolev, Kirill Sergeevich Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics Korolev, Kirill Sergeevich Species expand their geographical ranges following an environmental change, long range dispersal, or a new adaptation. Range expansions not only bring an ecological change, but also affect the evolution of the expanding species. Although the dynamics of deleterious, neutral, and beneficial mutations have been extensively studied in expanding populations, the fate of alleles under frequency-dependent selection remains largely unexplored. The dynamics of cooperative alleles are particularly interesting because selection can be both frequency and density dependent, resulting in a coupling between population and evolutionary dynamics. This coupling leads to an increase in the frequency of cooperators at the expansion front, and, under certain conditions, the entire front can be taken over by cooperators. Thus, a mixed population wave can split into an expansion wave of only cooperators followed by an invasion wave of defectors. After the splitting, cooperators increase in abundance by expanding into new territories faster than they are invaded by defectors. Our results not only provide an explanation for the maintenance of cooperation but also elucidate the effect of eco-evolutionary feedback on the maintenance of genetic diversity during range expansions. When cooperators do not split away, we find that defectors can spread much faster with cooperators than they would be able to on their own or by invading cooperators. This enhanced rate of expansion in mixed waves could counterbalance the loss of genetic diversity due to the founder effect for mutations under frequency-dependent selection. Although we focus on cooperator-defector interactions, our analysis could also be relevant for other systems described by reaction-diffusion equations. 2013-08-09T15:38:06Z 2013-08-09T15:38:06Z 2013-03 2012-09 Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle 1553-7358 http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/79824 Korolev, Kirill S. The Fate of Cooperation During Range Expansions. Edited by Carl T. Bergstrom. PLoS Computational Biology 9, no. 3 (March 28, 2013): en_US http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002994 PLoS Computational Biology Creative Commons Attribution http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ application/pdf Public Library of Science PLoS
spellingShingle Korolev, Kirill Sergeevich
The Fate of Cooperation during Range Expansions
title The Fate of Cooperation during Range Expansions
title_full The Fate of Cooperation during Range Expansions
title_fullStr The Fate of Cooperation during Range Expansions
title_full_unstemmed The Fate of Cooperation during Range Expansions
title_short The Fate of Cooperation during Range Expansions
title_sort fate of cooperation during range expansions
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/79824
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