The Tangled Nature Model of evolutionary dynamics reconsidered: structural and dynamical effects of trait inheritance
Christian Walther Andersen, Paolo Sibani

TL;DR
This study revisits the Tangled Nature Model by introducing trait inheritance, revealing how increased inheritance influences ecological structure, species survival, and population distributions, with implications for understanding evolutionary dynamics.
Contribution
The paper introduces a parametrized family of TNM models that incorporate trait inheritance, analyzing its structural and dynamical effects through numerical simulations.
Findings
Trait inheritance strengthens ecological core structure.
Population abundance distributions become more log-normal.
Survival probabilities decay as a power law with inheritance, with decay exponents decreasing as inheritance increases.
Abstract
The Tangled Nature Model of biological and cultural evolution features interacting agents which compete for limited resources and reproduce in an error prone fashion and at a rate depending on the `tangle' of interactions they maintain with others. The set of interactions linking a TNM individual to others is key to its reproductive success and arguably constitutes its most important property. Yet, in many studies, the interactions of an individual and those of its mutated off-spring are unrelated, a rather unrealistic feature corresponding to a point mutation turning a giraffe into an elephant. To bring out the structural and dynamical effects of trait inheritance , we introduce and numerically analyze a family of TNM models where a positive integer parametrises correlations between the interactions of an agent and those of its mutated offspring. For a single point mutation…
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