The infinitesimal model and evolutionary rescue

Alison Etheridge (Oxford)

20-Nov-2020, 16:00-17:00 (5 years ago)

Abstract: This lecture is part of the IICD & Probability and Society Initiative Joint Seminar Series, mini-series on Some mathematical models of evolution.

Many of the classical models of natural selection acting on a population suppose that an individual's fitness is determined by its type at some small number of genetic loci. However, in many scenarios selection is acting on a trait that is determined by the accumulation of small effects at a very large number of loci. To model this situation, we introduce the `infinitesimal model' under which within-family trait values are normally distributed (although the values across the whole population could be far from normal), and then use it to investigate `evolutionary rescue' - the process through which maladapted individuals are able to evolve a positive growth rate fast enough to avoid extinction.

evolutionprobability

Audience: researchers in the topic


Probability and Biology mini-series

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Organizer: Ivan Z Corwin*
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