On relatedness and adaptive topography in kin selection
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1154966
DOI10.1016/0040-5809(81)90036-8zbMath0465.92010OpenAlexW1973281096MaRDI QIDQ1154966
Marcus W. Feldman, Marcy K. Uyenoyama
Publication date: 1981
Published in: Theoretical Population Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0040-5809(81)90036-8
discrete modelskin selectionstationary pointsaltruismrelatednessrandom matingpolymorphic equilibriasingle locustwo allelesadaptive topographysex-linkedadaptive functionautosomal
Related Items (14)
Modifiers of mutation rate: A general reduction principle ⋮ Conformity and content-biased cultural transmission in the evolution of altruism ⋮ Hierarchical selection theory and sex ratios I. General solutions for structured populations ⋮ Social evolution and genetic interactions in the short and long term ⋮ Diffusion approximations for one-locus multi-allele kin selection, mutation and random drift in group-structured populations: a unifying approach to selection models in population genetics ⋮ More on recombination and selection in the modifier theory of sex-ratio distortion ⋮ The evolution of altruism between siblings: Hamilton's rule revisited ⋮ Towards a genetic theory for the evolution of the sex ratio II. Haplodiploid and diploid models with sibling and parental control of the brood sex ratio and brood size ⋮ Towards a genetic theory for the evolution of the sex ratio III. Parental and sibling control of brood investment ratio under partial sib-mating ⋮ A general reduction principle for genetic modifiers of recombination ⋮ Relatedness and inclusive fitness with inbreeding ⋮ Evolutionary stability in one-parameter models under weak selection ⋮ Kin selection and coefficients of relatedness in family-structured populations with inbreeding ⋮ A criterion for stability-instability at fixation states involving an eigenvalue one with applications in population genetics
Cites Work
This page was built for publication: On relatedness and adaptive topography in kin selection