Bibliography - A. Livnat
- Livnat, A., Stephen W. Pacala, and S. A. Levin, 2005: The Evolution of Intergenerational Discounting in Offspring Quality. American Naturalist, http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/pdf/10.1086/428294?cookieSet=1, 165(3), 311-321
[ Abstract ]Intergenerational effects occur when an individual’s actions
affect not only its own survivorship and reproduction but also
those of its offspring and possibly later descendants. In the presence
of intergenerational effects, short-term and long-term measures of
success (such as the expected numbers of surviving offspring and of
farther descendants, respectively) may be in conflict. When such
conflicts occur, life-history theory normally takes long-termmeasures
to predict the outcome of selection. This ignores the fact that, because
traits change in time—through mutation, sex, and recombination—
long-term relations disintegrate. We study this issue with numerical
simulations and analytical models combining intergenerational effects
and evolutionary change. In the models, the parental investment
per offspring, as well as the total reproductive effort, stand for investments
in future generations. The models show that the rate of
evolutionary change determines the level of those investments.
Higher rates of mutation and of sexual as opposed to parthenogenetic
reproduction favor lower parental investment per offspring and lower
total reproductive effort. It follows that the level of investment of
ancestors in descendants responds to the genetic relatedness between
the generations of the lineage, in a manner unaccounted for by
preexisting theory.
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