- THIS ARTICLE
- Full Text (PDF)
- Alert me when this article is cited
- Alert me if a correction is posted
- SERVICES
- Similar articles in this journal
- Similar articles in PubMed
- Alert me to new issues of the journal
- Download to citation manager
- Reprints & Permissions
- CITING ARTICLES
- Citing Articles via HighWire
- Citing Articles via Google Scholar
- GOOGLE SCHOLAR
- Articles by Sasaki, A.
- Articles by Iwasa, Y.
- Search for Related Content
- PUBMED
- PubMed Citation
- Articles by Sasaki, A.
- Articles by Iwasa, Y.
Optimal Recombination Rate in Fluctuating Environments
Akira Sasaki 1 and Yoh Iwasa 1
1 Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Kyushu University,
Fukuoka 812, Japan
The optimal recombination rate which maximizes the long-term geometric average of the population fitness is studied for a two-locus haploid model, assuming that the fitnesses of genotypes AB, Ab, aB and ab are 1 + s(t), 1 - s(t), 1 - s(t), and 1 + s(t), respectively, where s(t) follows various stationary stochastic processes with the average zero. With positive recombination, the polymorphism is stably maintained at both loci. After an initial transient phase, the dynamics are reduced to one dimension, and are analyzed for (i) weak selection limit, (ii) strong selection limit, and (iii) selection with two state Markovian jump. Results are: (1) If the environmental fluctuation has a predominant periodic component, ropt is approximately inversely proportional to the period irrespective of selection intensity. (2) If the fluctuation is a superposition of many periodic components, the one with the longest period is the most effective in determining ropt because the genetic dynamics cannot track very quick fluctuations (low pass filter effect). (3) If the power spectrum density is decreasing with the frequency, as in pink, or 1/f noises, ropt is small when selection is weak, and increases with the selection intensity. Numerical calculation of the genetic dynamics of a recombination modifier supports all these predictions for the evolutionarily stable recombination rate.
Submitted on June 3, 1986Accepted on November 5, 1986
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
S. Gandon and S. P. Otto The Evolution of Sex and Recombination in Response to Abiotic or Coevolutionary Fluctuations in Epistasis Genetics, April 1, 2007; 175(4): 1835 - 1853. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. F. Agrawal, L. Hadany, and S. P. Otto The Evolution of Plastic Recombination Genetics, October 1, 2005; 171(2): 803 - 812. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
