Multiple organisms can sometimes affect a common phenotype. For example, the portion of a leaf eaten by an insect is a joint phenotype of the plant and insect and the amount of food obtained by an offspring can be a joint trait with its mother. Here, I describe the evolution of joint phenotypes in quantitative genetic terms. A joint phenotype for multiple species evolves as the sum of additive genetic variances in each species, weighted by the selection on each species. Selective conflict between the interactants occurs when selection takes opposite signs on the joint phenotype. The mean fitness of a population changes not just through its own genetic variance but also through the genetic variance for its fitness that resides in other speci...
Trade-offs are fundamental to understanding the origin and maintenance of biological diversity. In ...
The emergence of cooperation in populations of selfish individuals is a fascinating topic that has i...
this paper we link together these three time scales in a formal model of phenotypic evolution of two...
Competition and cooperation is fundamental to evolution by natural selection, both in animals and pl...
A useful interpretation of quantitative genetic models of evolutionary change is that they (i) defin...
Darwinian evolution consists of the gradual transformation of heritable traits due to natural select...
The evolutionary stability of quantitative traits depends on whether a population can resist invasio...
We analyze the evolution of a multidimensional quantitative trait in a class-structured focal specie...
Natural selection primarily acts at the level of the individual. Despite this, cooperation exists in...
Adaptive speciation can occur when a population undergoes assortative mating and disruptive selectio...
The aim of this study is to place a wide variety of two-phenotype frequency-dependent selection mode...
BACKGROUND: Antagonistic species interactions can lead to coevolutionary genotype or phenotype frequ...
Models of phenotypic evolution fit to phylogenetic comparative data are widely used to make inferenc...
Two guiding principles identify which biological entities are able to evolve adaptations. Williams' ...
Abstract Adaptation often proceeds from standing variation, and natural selection acting on pairs of...
Trade-offs are fundamental to understanding the origin and maintenance of biological diversity. In ...
The emergence of cooperation in populations of selfish individuals is a fascinating topic that has i...
this paper we link together these three time scales in a formal model of phenotypic evolution of two...
Competition and cooperation is fundamental to evolution by natural selection, both in animals and pl...
A useful interpretation of quantitative genetic models of evolutionary change is that they (i) defin...
Darwinian evolution consists of the gradual transformation of heritable traits due to natural select...
The evolutionary stability of quantitative traits depends on whether a population can resist invasio...
We analyze the evolution of a multidimensional quantitative trait in a class-structured focal specie...
Natural selection primarily acts at the level of the individual. Despite this, cooperation exists in...
Adaptive speciation can occur when a population undergoes assortative mating and disruptive selectio...
The aim of this study is to place a wide variety of two-phenotype frequency-dependent selection mode...
BACKGROUND: Antagonistic species interactions can lead to coevolutionary genotype or phenotype frequ...
Models of phenotypic evolution fit to phylogenetic comparative data are widely used to make inferenc...
Two guiding principles identify which biological entities are able to evolve adaptations. Williams' ...
Abstract Adaptation often proceeds from standing variation, and natural selection acting on pairs of...
Trade-offs are fundamental to understanding the origin and maintenance of biological diversity. In ...
The emergence of cooperation in populations of selfish individuals is a fascinating topic that has i...
this paper we link together these three time scales in a formal model of phenotypic evolution of two...