Natural selection at multiple scales
Steven A. Frank

TL;DR
This paper develops a unified theoretical framework to analyze natural selection acting at multiple scales, revealing how opposing forces shape evolutionary outcomes across different biological contexts.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model that generalizes multitrait interactions and clarifies the roles of fundamental forces of selection across scales.
Findings
Opposing forces at different scales can be integrated into a single analytical framework.
The model clarifies distinctions between kin selection, multilevel selection, and inclusive fitness.
Static analysis explains how different forces combine to influence traits.
Abstract
Natural selection acts on traits at different scales, often with opposing consequences. This article identifies the particular forces that act at each scale and how those forces combine to determine the overall evolutionary outcome. A series of extended models derive from the tragedy of the commons, illustrating opposing forces at different scales. Examples include the primary tension between conflict and cooperation and the evolution of virulence, sex ratios, dispersal, and evolvability. The unified analysis subsumes interactions within and between species by generalizing multitrait interactions. Expanded notions of recombination and cotransmission arise. The core theoretical approach isolates the fundamental forces of selection, including marginal valuation, correlation between interacting entities, and reproductive value. Those fundamental forces act as partial causes that combine at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolution and Genetic Dynamics
