Title of article
Evolutionary jumping and breakthrough in tree masting evolution
Author/Authors
Tachiki، نويسنده , , Yuuya and Iwasa، نويسنده , , Yoh، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
12
From page
20
To page
31
Abstract
Many long-lived plants such as trees show masting or intermittent and synchronized reproduction. In a coupled chaos system describing the dynamics of individual-plant resource budgets, masting occurs when the resource depletion coefficient k (ratio of the reproductive expenditure to the excess resource reserve) is large. Here, we mathematically studied the condition for masting evolution. In an infinitely large population, we obtained a deterministic dynamical system, to which we applied the pairwise invasibility plot and convergence stability of evolutionary singularity analyses. We prove that plants reproducing at the same rate every year are not evolutionarily stable. The resource depletion coefficient k increases, and the system oscillates with a period of 2 years (high and low reproduction) if k < 1 . Alternatively, k may evolve further and jump to a value >1, resulting in the sudden start of intermittent reproduction. We confirm that a high survivorship of young plants (seedlings) in the light-limited understory favors masting evolution, as previously suggested by computer simulations and field observations. The stochasticity caused by the finiteness of population size also promotes masting evolution.
Keywords
Seedling survivorship , evolutionary game theory , Pairwise invasibility plot , Mast seeding , Finite population
Journal title
Theoretical Population Biology
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Theoretical Population Biology
Record number
1567478
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