Genotype specificity and spatial arrangement govern the direction and magnitude of selection in variable environments
Hossein Nemati, Kamran Kaveh, Jakub Svoboda, Mohammad Reza Ejtehadi, Krishnendu Chatterjee

TL;DR
This study develops a unified framework to understand how spatial environmental variation influences natural selection, revealing that genotype specificity and spatial arrangement jointly determine the direction and strength of selection in structured populations.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive model linking ecological factors and spatial structure to selection outcomes, unifying previous disparate theoretical results.
Findings
Heterogeneity amplifies selection when it modulates resident fitness.
Heterogeneity suppresses selection when it modulates mutant fitness.
Spatial arrangement affects the magnitude but not the direction of selection.
Abstract
Spatial environmental variation can either amplify or suppress the fixation of beneficial mutants in structured populations, yet the interplay of ecological factors and spatial structure in determining which outcome occurs remains theoretically unresolved. Here, we develop a unified framework for selection on lattice graphs with environmental heterogeneity, in which mutant and resident fitness depend on the local environmental state. Across three common classes of genotype-environment interactions and a wide range of spatial arrangements of environmental states, we identify two governing principles. Genotype specificity determines the direction of the effect: heterogeneity amplifies selection when it modulates resident fitness, but suppresses selection when it modulates mutant fitness, with genotype-symmetric modulation producing weaker amplification. Spatial arrangement determines the…
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