Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4496489 | Journal of Theoretical Biology | 2013 | 15 Pages |
We analyze the evolution of specialization in resource utilization in a mechanistically underpinned discrete-time model using the adaptive dynamics approach. We assume two nutritionally equivalent resources that in the absence of consumers grow sigmoidally towards a resource-specific carrying capacity. The consumers use resources according to the law of mass-action with rates involving trade-off. The resulting discrete-time model for the consumer population has over-compensatory dynamics. We illuminate the way non-equilibrium population dynamics affect the evolutionary dynamics of the resource consumption rates, and show that evolution to the trimorphic coexistence of a generalist and two specialists is possible due to asynchronous non-equilibrium population dynamics of the specialists. In addition, various forms of cyclic evolutionary dynamics are possible. Furthermore, evolutionary suicide may occur even without Allee effects and demographic stochasticity.
► We analyze the evolution of resource usage under non-equilibrium population dynamics. ► We assume two substitutable resources with trade-off in usage rates. ► A generalist can coexist with two specialists under non-equilibrium population dynamics. ► Evolutionary suicide and branching-extinction cycles are possible.