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1 January 2000 ADAPTATION AND THE COST OF COMPLEXITY
H. Allen Orr
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Abstract

Adaptation is characterized by the movement of a population toward a many-character optimum, movement that results in an increase in fitness. Here I calculate the rate at which fitness increases during adaptation and describe the curve giving fitness versus time as a population approaches an optimum in Fisher's model of adaptation. The results identify several factors affecting the speed of adaptation. One of the most important is organismal complexity—complex organisms adapt more slowly than simple ones when using mutations of the same phenotypic size. Thus, as Fisher foresaw, organisms pay a kind of cost of complexity. However, the magnitude of this cost is considerably larger than Fisher's analysis suggested. Indeed the rate of adaptation declines at least as fast as n−1, where n is the number of independent characters or dimensions comprising an organism. The present results also suggest that one can define an effective number of dimensions characterizing an adapting species.

Corresponding Editor: A. Caballero

H. Allen Orr "ADAPTATION AND THE COST OF COMPLEXITY," Evolution 54(1), 13-20, (1 January 2000). https://doi.org/10.1554/0014-3820(2000)054[0013:AATCOC]2.0.CO;2
Received: 25 February 1999; Accepted: 1 July 1999; Published: 1 January 2000
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KEYWORDS
Adaptation
complexity
Fisher's geometric model
fundamental theorem of natural selection
pleiotropy
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