Data from: When does gene flow facilitate evolutionary rescue?
Experimental and theoretical studies have highlighted the impact of gene flow on the probability of evolutionary rescue in structured habitats. Mathematical modelling and simulations of evolutionary rescue in spatially or otherwise structured populations showed that intermediate migration rates can...
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Zusammenfassung: | Experimental and theoretical studies have highlighted the impact of gene
flow on the probability of evolutionary rescue in structured habitats.
Mathematical modelling and simulations of evolutionary rescue in spatially
or otherwise structured populations showed that intermediate migration
rates can often maximize the probability of rescue in gradually or
abruptly deteriorating habitats. These theoretical results corroborate the
positive effect of gene flow on evolutionary rescue that has been
identified in experimental yeast populations. The observations that gene
flow can facilitate adaptation are in seeming conflict with traditional
population genetics results that show that gene flow usually hampers
(local) adaptation. Identifying conditions for when gene flow facilitates
survival chances of populations rather than reducing them remains a key
unresolved theoretical question. We here present a simple analytically
tractable model for evolutionary rescue in a two-deme model with gene
flow. Our main result is a simple condition for when migration facilitates
evolutionary rescue, as opposed as no migration. We further investigate
the roles of asymmetries in gene flow and / or carrying capacities, and
the effects of density regulation and local growth rates on evolutionary
rescue. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.dbrv15dz8 |