The role of selective extinction in promoting cooperation in a many demes model
•Diffusion approximation captures evolutionary dynamics.,•Uniform extinction suppresses cooperation in structured populations.,•Targeted extinction can promote cooperation.,•Extinction rate’s impact depends on payoff asymmetry (T−R vs. P−S). This study investigates the evolution of cooperation in a...
Uložené v:
| Vydané v: | Journal of theoretical biology Ročník 613; s. 112212 |
|---|---|
| Hlavný autor: | |
| Médium: | Journal Article |
| Jazyk: | English |
| Vydavateľské údaje: |
England
Elsevier Ltd
07.10.2025
|
| Predmet: | |
| ISSN: | 0022-5193, 1095-8541, 1095-8541 |
| On-line prístup: | Získať plný text |
| Tagy: |
Pridať tag
Žiadne tagy, Buďte prvý, kto otaguje tento záznam!
|
| Shrnutí: | •Diffusion approximation captures evolutionary dynamics.,•Uniform extinction suppresses cooperation in structured populations.,•Targeted extinction can promote cooperation.,•Extinction rate’s impact depends on payoff asymmetry (T−R vs. P−S).
This study investigates the evolution of cooperation in a deme-structured population where individuals interact via the Prisoner’s Dilemma. Reproduction is payoff-dependent, and demes contribute to a global migrant pool proportionally to their fecundity. Deme extinction occurs with a baseline probability plus an additional probability term that is proportional to the fraction of defectors in the deme, modulated by a parameter α. Extinct demes are then repopulated from the migrant pool. A two-timescale analysis, valid in the limit of a large number of demes, reveals that the system’s evolutionary dynamics are well-approximated by a continuous-time diffusion process. Using this diffusion approximation, we show that uniform extinction (α=0) suppresses cooperation. However, extinction targeting defector-dominated demes can significantly promote cooperation, establishing critical thresholds of α that determine when cooperation dominates. The study further explores how varying extinction rates and reproductive dynamics impact cooperation’s persistence and evolutionary success in structured populations. |
|---|---|
| Bibliografia: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
| ISSN: | 0022-5193 1095-8541 1095-8541 |
| DOI: | 10.1016/j.jtbi.2025.112212 |