An extension of the selection differential in the Robertson–Price equation for the mean phenotype in an age-structured population is provided. Temporal changes in the mean phenotype caused by transient fluctuations in the age-distribution and variation in mean phenotype among age classes, which can mistakenly be interpreted as selection, will disappear if reproductive value weighting is applied. Changes in any weighted mean phenotype in an age-structured population may be decomposed into between- and within-age class components. Using reproductive value weighting the between-age class component becomes pure noise, generated by previous genetic drift or fluctuating selection. This component, which we call transient quasi-selection, can there...
1. Within populations, the expression of phenotypic traits typically varies with age. Such age-depen...
1. Within populations, the expression of phenotypic traits typically varies with age. Such age-depen...
In changing environments, phenotypic traits are shaped by numerous agents of selection. The optimal ...
An extension of the selection differential in the Robertson–Price equation for the mean phenotype in...
An extension of the selection differential in the Robertson–Price equation for the mean phenotype in...
Summary of thesis: In age-structured populations, subject to environmental and demographic stochast...
Time series of rapid phenotypic change have been documented in age-structured populations living in ...
Time series of rapid phenotypic change have been documented in age-structured populations living in ...
Evolutionary questions regarding aging address patterns of within‐individual change in traits during...
Evolutionary questions regarding aging address patterns of within-individual change in traits during...
Despite considerable interest in temporal and spatial variation of phenotypic selection, very few me...
Evolutionary questions regarding aging address patterns of within-individual change in traits during...
Despite considerable interest in temporal and spatial variation of phenotypic selection, very few me...
1. Within populations, the expression of phenotypic traits typically varies with age. Such age-depen...
In changing environments, phenotypic traits are shaped by numerous agents of selection. The optimal ...
1. Within populations, the expression of phenotypic traits typically varies with age. Such age-depen...
1. Within populations, the expression of phenotypic traits typically varies with age. Such age-depen...
In changing environments, phenotypic traits are shaped by numerous agents of selection. The optimal ...
An extension of the selection differential in the Robertson–Price equation for the mean phenotype in...
An extension of the selection differential in the Robertson–Price equation for the mean phenotype in...
Summary of thesis: In age-structured populations, subject to environmental and demographic stochast...
Time series of rapid phenotypic change have been documented in age-structured populations living in ...
Time series of rapid phenotypic change have been documented in age-structured populations living in ...
Evolutionary questions regarding aging address patterns of within‐individual change in traits during...
Evolutionary questions regarding aging address patterns of within-individual change in traits during...
Despite considerable interest in temporal and spatial variation of phenotypic selection, very few me...
Evolutionary questions regarding aging address patterns of within-individual change in traits during...
Despite considerable interest in temporal and spatial variation of phenotypic selection, very few me...
1. Within populations, the expression of phenotypic traits typically varies with age. Such age-depen...
In changing environments, phenotypic traits are shaped by numerous agents of selection. The optimal ...
1. Within populations, the expression of phenotypic traits typically varies with age. Such age-depen...
1. Within populations, the expression of phenotypic traits typically varies with age. Such age-depen...
In changing environments, phenotypic traits are shaped by numerous agents of selection. The optimal ...