Community-level evolutionary processes: Linking community genetics with replicator-interactor theory

Christopher H. Lean, W. Ford Doolittle, Joseph P. Bielawski

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

2 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Understanding community-level selection using Lewontin's criteria requires both community-level inheritance and community-level heritability, and in the discipline of community and ecosystem genetics, these are often conflated. While there are existing studies that show the possibility of both, these studies impose community-level inheritance as a product of the experimental design. For this reason, these experiments provide only weak support for the existence of community-level selection in nature. By contrast, treating communities as interactors (in line with Hull's replicator-interactor framework or Dawkins's idea of the "extended phenotype") provides a more plausible and empirically supportable model for the role of ecological communities in the evolutionary process.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)e2202538119
PublicaciónProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volumen119
N.º46
DOI
EstadoPublished - nov. 16 2022

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • General

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

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