Complex Limiting Behaviour of Multilocus Genetic Systems in Cyclical EnvironmentsJournal of Theoretical Biology, Vol. 190, No. 3. (7 February 1998), pp. 215-225.
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AbstractHere we demonstrate that complex limiting behaviour (supercycles and chaotic-like phenomena) may arise in a rather broad and natural class of multilocus systems, both haploid and diploid, experiencing stabilizing selection with cyclically varying optima over a short period. These include loci with purely additive, dominant, or semidominant effects, with different types of their chromosome distribution. The observed complex dynamics appeared to manifest a certain stability with respect to disturbances of parameters specifying the structure of the selected system and environmental characteristics. This mode of multilocus dynamics by far exceeds the potential attainable under ordinary selection models resulting in simple behaviour. It may represent a novel evolutionary mechanism increasing genetic diversity over long time periods. This novel mechanism could contribute to the observation that biological diversity has increased over geological time regardless of the well-known massive extinctions.
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