Modelling Invasion Dynamics with Spatial Random-Fitness due to Microenvironment
Venkata. S. K. Manem, Kamran Kaveh, Mohammad Kohandel, Siv, Sivaloganathan

TL;DR
This study models how spatially random microenvironmental factors influence invasion dynamics of species, revealing that heterogeneity and migration significantly affect invasion probabilities and phenotypic heterogeneity.
Contribution
The paper introduces a computational framework that incorporates site-dependent random fitness and migration to analyze invasion in structured populations, highlighting the impact of environmental heterogeneity.
Findings
Invasion probability decreases with fitness variance without migration.
Migration increases invasion probability with higher fitness variance.
Bimodal fitness distributions require a threshold proportion of advantageous phenotypes.
Abstract
Numerous experimental studies have demonstrated that the microenvironment is a key regulator influencing the proliferative and migrative potentials of species. Spatial and temporal disturbances lead to adverse and hazardous microenvironments for cellular systems that is reflected in the phenotypic heterogeneity within the system. In this paper, we study the effect of microenvironment on the invasive capability of species, or mutants, on structured grids under the influence of site-dependent random proliferation in addition to a migration potential. We discuss both continuous and discrete fitness distributions. Our results suggest that the invasion probability is negatively correlated with the variance of fitness distribution of mutants (for both advantageous and neutral mutants) in the absence of migration of both types of cells. A similar behaviour is observed even in the presence of a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Mathematical and Theoretical Epidemiology and Ecology Models
