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Fitness (biology)

 

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Fitness (biology)



 
 
Fitness (often denoted in population genetics
Population genetics

Population genetics is the study of the allele frequency distribution and change under the influence of the four evolutionary processes: natural selection, genetic drift, mutation and gene flow....
 models) is a central concept in evolutionary theory
Evolution

In biology, evolution is change in the heritability trait of a population of organisms from one generation to the next. These changes are caused by a combination of three main processes: variation, reproduction, and selection....
. It describes the capability of an individual of certain genotype
Genotype

The genotype is the trait we can't see. The genotype is the Genetics constitution of a cell, an organism, or an individual usually with reference to a specific character under consideration....
 to reproduce, and usually is equal to the proportion of the individual's gene
Gene

A gene is the basic unit of heredity in a living organism. All living things depend on genes. Genes hold the information to build and maintain their cell and pass genetic trait to offspring....
s in all the genes of the next generation. If differences in individual genotypes affect fitness, then the frequencies of the genotypes will change over generations; the genotypes with higher fitness become more common.






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Fitness (often denoted in population genetics
Population genetics

Population genetics is the study of the allele frequency distribution and change under the influence of the four evolutionary processes: natural selection, genetic drift, mutation and gene flow....
 models) is a central concept in evolutionary theory
Evolution

In biology, evolution is change in the heritability trait of a population of organisms from one generation to the next. These changes are caused by a combination of three main processes: variation, reproduction, and selection....
. It describes the capability of an individual of certain genotype
Genotype

The genotype is the trait we can't see. The genotype is the Genetics constitution of a cell, an organism, or an individual usually with reference to a specific character under consideration....
 to reproduce, and usually is equal to the proportion of the individual's gene
Gene

A gene is the basic unit of heredity in a living organism. All living things depend on genes. Genes hold the information to build and maintain their cell and pass genetic trait to offspring....
s in all the genes of the next generation. If differences in individual genotypes affect fitness, then the frequencies of the genotypes will change over generations; the genotypes with higher fitness become more common. This process is called natural selection
Natural selection

Natural selection is the process by which favorable heritable trait become more common in successive generations of a population of Reproduction organisms, and unfavorable heritable traits become less common, due to differential reproduction of genotypes....
.

An individual's fitness is manifested through its phenotype
Phenotype

A phenotype is any observable characteristic or trait_ of an organism: such as its morphology , development, biochemical or physiological properties, or behavior....
. As phenotype is affected by both genes and environment, the fitnesses of different individuals with the same genotype are not necessarily equal, but depend on the environment in which the individuals live. However, since the fitness of the genotype is an averaged quantity, it will reflect the reproductive outcomes of all individuals with that genotype.

As fitness measures the quantity of the copies of the genes of an individual in the next generation, it doesn't really matter how the genes arrive in the next generation. That is, for an individual it is equally "beneficial" to reproduce itself, or to help relatives with similar genes to reproduce, as long as similar amount of copies of individual's genes get passed on to the next generation. Selection which promotes this kind of helper behaviour is called kin selection
Kin selection

Some organisms tend to exhibit strategies that favor the reproductive success of their relatives, even at a cost to their own survival and/or reproduction....
.

The concept is particularly difficult to understand and frequently misunderstood; J.B.S. Haldane when discussing it with John Maynard Smith is reported to have described it as "a bugger".

Measures of fitness

There are two commonly used measures of fitness; absolute fitness and relative fitness.

Absolute fitness of a genotype is defined as the ratio
Ratio

A ratio is an expression which compares quantities relative to each other. The most common examples involve two quantities, but in theory any number of quantities can be compared....
 between the number of individuals with that genotype after selection to those before selection. It is calculated for a single generation
Generation

Generation , also known as reproduction, is the act of producing offspring. In a more generic sense, it can also refer to the act of creating something inanimate such as electricity generation or cryptography code generation....
 and may be calculated from absolute numbers or from frequencies. When the fitness is larger than 1.0, the genotype increases in frequency; a ratio smaller than 1.0 indicates a decrease in frequency.

Absolute fitness for a genotype can also be calculated as the product of the proportion survival
Survival

Survival may refer to:* Survival analysis* Survival of the fittest* Survival kit* Survival rate* Survival skills* Survivalism, a survival belief based around preparation for survival after social upheaval...
 times the average fecundity
Fecundity

Fecundity, derived from the word wikt:fecund, generally refers to the ability to reproduce. In biology and demography, fecundity is the potential reproductive capacity of an organism or population, measured by the number of gametes , seed set or asexual propagules....
.

Relative fitness is quantified as the average number of surviving progeny of a particular genotype compared with average number of surviving progeny of competing genotypes after a single generation, i.e. one genotype is normalized at and the fitnesses of other genotypes are measured with respect to that genotype. Relative fitness can therefore take any nonnegative value, including 0.

While researchers can usually measure relative fitness, absolute fitness is more difficult. It is often difficult to determine how many individuals of a genotype there were immediately after reproduction.

The two concepts are related, and both of them are equivalent when they are divided by the mean
Mean

In statistics, mean has two related meanings:* the arithmetic mean .* the expected value of a random variable, which is also called the population mean....
 fitness, which is weighted by genotype frequencies.

Because fitness is a coefficient
Coefficient

In mathematics, a coefficient is a constant multiplication factor of a certain object. For example, in the expression 9x2, the coefficient of x2 is 9....
, and a variable may be multiplied by it several times, biologists may work with "log fitness" (particularly so before the advent of computer
Computer

A computer is a machine that manipulates Data according to a list of Code .The first devices that resemble modern computers date to the mid-20th century , although the computer concept and various machines similar to computers existed earlier....
s). By taking the logarithm
Logarithm

In mathematics, the logarithm of a number to a given base is the Power or exponent to which the base must be raised in order to produce the number....
 of fitness each term may be added rather than multiplied. A fitness landscape
Fitness landscape

In evolutionary biology, fitness landscapes or adaptive landscapes are used to visualize the relationship between genotypes and reproductive success....
, first conceptualized by Sewall Wright
Sewall Wright

Sewall Green Wright was an American geneticist known for his influential work on evolutionary theory and also for his work on path analysis . With R....
, is a way of visualising fitness in terms of a three-dimensional surface on which peaks correspond to local fitness maxima; it is often said that natural selection always progresses uphill but can only do so locally. This can result in suboptimal local maxima becoming stable, because natural selection cannot return to the less-fit "valleys" of the landscape on the way to reach higher peaks.

The related concept of genetic load
Genetic load

In population genetics, genetic load or genetic burden is a measure of the cost of lost alleles due to selection or mutation . It is a value in the range , where 0 represents no load....
 measures the overall fitness of a population of individuals of many genotypes whose fitnesses vary, relative to a hypothetical population in which the most fit genotype has become fixed
Fixation (population genetics)

In population genetics, fixation is the change in a gene pool from a situation where there exists at least two variants of a particular gene to a situation where only one of the alleles remains....
.

As another example we may mention the definition of fitness given by Maynard Smith in the following way: ”Fitness is a property, not of an individual, but of a class of individuals – for example homozygous for allele A at a particular locus. Thus the phrase ’expected number of offspring’ means the average number, not the number produced by some one individual. If the first human infant with a gene for levitation were struck by lightning in its pram, this would not prove the new genotype to have low fitness, but only that the particular child was unlucky.” This measure is certainly useful in breeding programs, but hardly as a basis of a model of an evolution selecting individuals, because evolution would hardly know if the individual may be selected or not.

Yet another possible measure has been formulated by Hartl,1981: "The fitness of the individual - having an array x of phenotypes - is the probability, s(x), that the individual will be included among the group selected as parents of the next generation." Then, the mean fitness may be determined as a mean over the set of individuals in a large population.

where N is the p. d. f. of phenotypes in the population, and m is its centre of gravity. This measure is a suitable basis of a model of an evolution selecting individuals. It may in principle take even the stroke of the lightning into consideration. In the case N is a Gaussian it is fairly easily proved that the average information (information entropy
Information entropy

In information theory, entropy is a measure of the uncertainty associated with a random variable. The term by itself in this context usually refers to the Shannon entropy, which quantifies, in the sense of an expected value, the self-information contained in a message, usually in units such as bits....
, disorder
Disorder

Disorder may refer to :* Disorder * Chaos, unpredictability and in the metaphysical sense, it is the opposite of law and order* Entropy, a state function of a thermodynamic system...
, diversity) of a large population may be maximized by Gaussian adaptation
Gaussian adaptation

Gaussian adaptation is an evolutionary algorithm designed for the maximization of manufacturing yield due to statistical deviation of component values of signal processing systems....
 - keeping the mean fitness constant - in accordance with recapitulation
Recapitulation theory

The theory of recapitulation, also called the biogenetic law or embryological parallelism, and often expressed as ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny, was put forward by ?tienne Serres in 1824?26 as what became known as the "Meckel-Serres Law" which attempted to provide a link between comparative embryology and a "pattern of un...
, the central limit theorem
Central limit theorem

The central limit theorem states that the re-averaged sum of a sufficiently large number of Independent and identically-distributed random variables Statistical independence random variables each with finite mean and variance will be approximately normal distribution ....
, the Hardy-Weinberg law and the second law of thermodynamics
Second law of thermodynamics

The second law of thermodynamics is an expression of the universal law of increasing entropy, stating that the entropy of an isolated system which is not in Thermodynamic equilibrium will tend to increase over time, approaching a maximum value at equilibrium....
. This is in contrast to Fisher's fundamental theorem of natural selection
Fisher's fundamental theorem of natural selection

In population genetics, Ronald Fisher's fundamental theorem of natural selection was originally stated as:Or, in more modern terminology:...
.

History

The British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 sociologist Herbert Spencer
Herbert Spencer

Herbert Spencer was an England philosopher, prominent Classical liberalism political theorist, and sociological theorist of the Victorian era....
 coined the phrase "survival of the fittest
Survival of the fittest

"Survival of the fittest" is a phrase which is shorthand for a concept relating to competition for survival or predominance. Originally applied by Herbert Spencer in his Principles of Biology of 1864, Spencer drew parallels to his ideas of economics with Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by what Darwin termed natural selection....
" (though originally, and perhaps more accurately, "survival of the best fitted") in his 1851 work Social Statics
Social Statics

Social Statics, or The Conditions essential to Happiness specified, and the First of them Developed is an 1851 book by the British economist Herbert Spencer....
 and later used it to characterise what Charles Darwin
Charles Darwin

Charles Robert Darwin Royal Society was an English people natural history who realised and presented compelling evidence that all species of life have evolution over time from common descent, through the process he called natural selection....
 had called natural selection
Natural selection

Natural selection is the process by which favorable heritable trait become more common in successive generations of a population of Reproduction organisms, and unfavorable heritable traits become less common, due to differential reproduction of genotypes....
. The British biologist J.B.S. Haldane was the first to quantify fitness, in terms of the modern evolutionary synthesis
Modern evolutionary synthesis

The modern evolutionary synthesis is a union of ideas from several biology specialties which forms a logical account of evolution. This synthesis has been generally accepted by most working biologists....
 of Darwinism and Mendelian genetics starting with his 1924 paper A Mathematical Theory of Natural and Artificial Selection
A Mathematical Theory of Natural and Artificial Selection

A Mathematical Theory of Natural and Artificial Selection is the title of a series of scientific papers by the United Kingdom population geneticist J.B.S....
. The next further advance was the introduction of the concept of inclusive fitness
Inclusive fitness

In evolutionary biology and evolutionary psychology, inclusive fitness refers to an organisms' personal reproductive success plus the amount of fitness an individual induces in its genetic kin....
 by the British biologist W.D. Hamilton in 1964 in his paper on The Evolution of Social Behavior
The Evolution of Social Behavior

The Genetical Evolution of Social Behavior is a 1964 scientific paper by the British evolutionary biologist W.D. Hamilton in which he mathematically lays out the basis for inclusive fitness....
.

Further reading


  • Sober, E.
    Elliott Sober

    Elliott Sober is Hans Reichenbach Professor and William F. Vilas Research Professor in the Department of Philosophy at University of Wisconsin-Madison....
     (2001). The Two Faces of Fitness. In R. Singh, D. Paul, C. Krimbas, and J. Beatty (Eds.), Thinking about Evolution: Historical, Philosophical, and Political Perspectives. Cambridge University Press, pp.309-321.


See also

  • Gene-centered view of evolution
    Gene-centered view of evolution

    The gene-centered view of evolution, gene selection theory or selfish gene theory holds that natural selection acts through differential survival of competing genes, increasing the frequency of those alleles whose Phenotype effects successfully promote their own propagation....
  • Inclusive fitness
    Inclusive fitness

    In evolutionary biology and evolutionary psychology, inclusive fitness refers to an organisms' personal reproductive success plus the amount of fitness an individual induces in its genetic kin....
  • Natural selection
    Natural selection

    Natural selection is the process by which favorable heritable trait become more common in successive generations of a population of Reproduction organisms, and unfavorable heritable traits become less common, due to differential reproduction of genotypes....
  • Reproductive success
    Reproductive success

    Reproductive success is defined as the passing of genes onto the next generation in a way that they too can pass those genes on. In practice, this is often a tally of the number of offspring produced by an individual....
  • Selection coefficient
    Selection coefficient

    In population genetics, the selection coefficient is a measure of the relative Fitness of a phenotype. Usually denoted by the letter s, it compares the fitness of a phenotype to another favoured phenotype, and is the proportional amount that the considered phenotype is less fit as measured by fertile progeny....


External links