Quantifying the role of population subdivision in evolution on rugged fitness landscapes
Anne-Florence Bitbol, David J. Schwab

TL;DR
This study quantitatively analyzes how population subdivision influences the speed of crossing fitness valleys or plateaus in rugged landscapes, revealing conditions under which subdivision accelerates evolutionary progress.
Contribution
It provides analytical expressions and simulations showing how subdivision and migration can significantly speed up fitness valley crossing in asexual populations.
Findings
Subdivision can substantially accelerate valley crossing.
Optimal speedup occurs when demes are in the sequential fixation regime.
Migration among islands enhances the speedup effect.
Abstract
Natural selection drives populations towards higher fitness, but crossing fitness valleys or plateaus may facilitate progress up a rugged fitness landscape involving epistasis. We investigate quantitatively the effect of subdividing an asexual population on the time it takes to cross a fitness valley or plateau. We focus on a generic and minimal model that includes only population subdivision into equivalent demes connected by global migration, and does not require significant size changes of the demes, environmental heterogeneity or specific geographic structure. We determine the optimal speedup of valley or plateau crossing that can be gained by subdivision, if the process is driven by the deme that crosses fastest. We show that isolated demes have to be in the sequential fixation regime for subdivision to significantly accelerate crossing. Using Markov chain theory, we obtain…
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