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Evolution and intraspecific exploitative competition I. One-locus theory for small additive gene effects
Authors:Freddy Bugge Christiansen  Volker Loeschcke
Affiliation:Institute of Ecology and Genetics, University of Aarhus, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark
Abstract:Using the model of exploitative competition of R. H. MacArthur and R. Levins (1967, Amer. Natur. 101, 377–385), evolution at a gene locus which influences the niche position is considered. The locus has multiple alleles, and the contributions of the alleles to the genotypic value are additive. The resource spectrum and the utilization functions of the genotypes are assumed to be Gaussian. Evolution will make the mode of the niche converge to the resource optimum, as long as the allele contributions are small compared to the distance between the mode of the niche and the resource optimum. When this distance is of the same order of magnitude as the allele contributions, then the globally stable equilibrium will maintain at most two alleles in the population, unless the allele contributions are large. Classical overdominance is not needed to maintain polymorphism. This result predicts high linkage disequilibrium in similar multilocus models. It is concluded that intraspecific competition can be a powerful force in maintaining two-allele polymorphisms, and that it can maintain high linkage disequilibrium among closely linked loci.
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