scholarly journals Change of information by positive frequency-dependent selection in two very different models (laser-like and chirality of shell-coiling in the snail Partula suturalis)

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. A. Tiefenbrunner

AbstractAlthough according to the second law of thermodynamics the world tends toward maximum disorder, over millions of years evolution has given rise to an enormous variety of complex organisms. To explain this, one must assume that natural selection is a process of information acquisition. Since some years an information theory of selection exists that can quantify this change and thus helps to understand the apparent contradiction between the existence of biological complexity and the tendency toward disorder that generally prevails in nature. Here I apply this theory to examples of frequency-dependent selection (this means: in which phenotype frequency determines its fitness).The snail Partula suturalis gave an evolutionary and ecologically unique and hence very valuable example of this type of selection before it became extinct about thirty years ago on its native island. Spatially separated populations with left- and right-coiled shells occurred on Moorea, but also hybridization zones. Since both types of shells were the same except for chirality, the question is whether selection happened at all. The inheritance of this character is monogenic and in this respect simple, but is complicated by the fact that it is the maternal genotype, not the own, that determines the phenotype. This causes that for the calculation of the information change by selection not the genotype or phenotype frequencies are sufficient, but one must consider their combination. The simulation shows that frequency-dependent selection in P. suturalis indeed increased information.It has already been shown that selection can also be important outside animate nature, for example in the generation of laser light, which has extraordinary properties: it is monochromatic, monoaxial and monophasic. Phase selection is frequency(=density)-dependent and therefore of interest here. In selection theory the mean fitness ω is of special significance. In a laser-like model, in modeling phase selection, we find that ω=1+A2, where A2 is the the light intensity or the square of the amplitude, respectively. During selection, ω increases and, in parallel, since selection is a process of information acquisition, so does the information. Because of the connection between ω and A2 this also means for the laser-like model that – assuming a constant number of photons – a larger amplitude always means more information (less entropy).

Genetics ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 167 (1) ◽  
pp. 499-512 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marjorie A. Asmussen ◽  
Reed A. Cartwright ◽  
Hamish G. Spencer

Evolution ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 558 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Nassar ◽  
H. J. Muhs ◽  
R. D. Cook

2011 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuma Takahashi ◽  
Satoru Morita ◽  
Jin Yoshimura ◽  
Mamoru Watanabe

2010 ◽  
Vol 67 (12) ◽  
pp. 1933-1941 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barry A. Berejikian ◽  
Donald M. Van Doornik ◽  
Rob C. Endicott ◽  
Timothy L. Hoffnagle ◽  
Eugene P. Tezak ◽  
...  

As with other species, frequency-dependent selection during reproduction has long been proposed as an important mechanism in maintaining alternative male reproductive phenotypes in Pacific salmon ( Oncorhynchus spp.). Jack salmon mature one year earlier than the youngest females in a population and are much smaller than older “adult” males. We tested the hypothesis that mating success of both phenotypes is consistent with the frequency-dependent selection model. By holding male density constant and varying the frequency of adults and jacks in eight separate breeding groups, we found that adult male access to females, participation in spawning events, and adult-to-fry reproductive success increased with their decreasing frequency in a breeding group. Jacks exhibited the same pattern (increasing success with decreasing frequency), although the relationships were not as strong as for adults. Overall, jack and adult males mated with a similar number of females, but jacks sired only 20% of all offspring. Observational data suggested that adult males benefited from sperm precedence associated with their ability to court females and enter the nest first at the time of spawning. Our work provides the first experimental evidence of frequency-dependent selection during mating in the family Salmonidae.


2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
pp. 20160467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel I. Bolnick ◽  
Kimberly Hendrix ◽  
Lyndon Alexander Jordan ◽  
Thor Veen ◽  
Chad D. Brock

Variation in male nuptial colour signals might be maintained by negative frequency-dependent selection. This can occur if males are more aggressive towards rivals with locally common colour phenotypes. To test this hypothesis, we introduced red or melanic three-dimensional printed-model males into the territories of nesting male stickleback from two optically distinct lakes with different coloured residents. Red-throated models were attacked more in the population with red males, while melanic models were attacked more in the melanic male lake. Aggression against red versus melanic models also varied across a depth gradient within each lake, implying that the local light environment also modulated the strength of negative frequency dependence acting on male nuptial colour.


2005 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 3-11
Author(s):  
Nikolay I Vorobyov ◽  
Nikolay A Provorov

The method for mathematical simulation is suggested to analyze the balanced polymorphism in rhizobia population generated due to the interplay of Darwinian and frequency-dependent selection. Analysis of the model suggested that this polymorphism is determined not only by the selection pressures but also by the capacities of ecological niches occupied by bacteria in the «plant-soil» system. The model may be used for analyzing the selective processes in various symbiotic systems and for predicting the consequences of releasing of genetically modified plant symbionts into environment.


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