The evolution of sleep is inevitable
Jared M. Field, Michael B. Bonsall

TL;DR
This paper uses an evolutionary model to demonstrate that sleep evolution is inevitable in changing environments due to its higher fitness compared to not sleeping.
Contribution
The study introduces a mathematical model showing that sleep provides a fitness advantage in variable environments, supporting its evolutionary inevitability.
Findings
Sleeping yields higher fitness than not sleeping in heterogeneous environments.
Evolution of sleep is inevitable due to environmental variability.
Mathematical model confirms adaptive significance of sleep.
Abstract
There are two contrasting explanations of sleep: as a proximate, essential physiological function or as an adaptive state of inactivity and these hypotheses remain widely debated. To investigate the adaptive significance of sleep, we develop an evolutionary argument formulated as a tractable partial differential equation model. We allow demographic parameters such as birth and mortality rates to vary through time in both safe and vulnerable sleeping environments. From this model we analytically calculate population growth rate (fitness) for sleeping and non-sleeping strategies. We find that, in a temporally heterogeneous environment, sleeping always achieves a higher fitness than not sleeping. As organisms do not exist in constant environments, we conclude that the evolution of sleep is inevitable.
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and Wakefulness Research · Circadian rhythm and melatonin · Sleep and related disorders
