Abstract: | The maintenance of genetic variability in morphological traits that affect fitness is poorly understood. We present a simple Mendelian model of genetic traits affecting foraging efficiency in grazing ungulates, based on a trade-off between rates of energy extraction at low versus high levels of plant abundance. The model suggests that variation in foraging efficiency could be maintained via lottery competition arising as a direct consequence of dynamically unstable interactions between consumers and their food resources. Lottery competition is a plausible mechanism for explaining wide variability in foraging efficiency, such as that documented in unstable Soay sheep populations on the St Kilda archipelago. |