language-icon Old Web
English
Sign In

Quantifying invasibility

2021 
Invasibility, the chance of a population to grow from rarity and to establish a large-abundance colony, plays a fundamental role in population genetics, ecology, and evolution. For many decades, the mean growth rate when rare has been employed as an invasion criterion. Recent analyses have shown that this criterion fails as a quantitative metric for invasibility, with its magnitude sometimes even increasing while the invasibility decreases. Here we employ a new large-deviations (Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin, WKB) approach and derive a novel and easy-to-use formula for the chance of invasion in terms of the mean growth rate and its variance. We also explain how to extract the required parameters from abundance time series. The efficacy of the formula, including its accompanying data analysis technique, is demonstrated using synthetic and empirically-calibrated time series from a few canonical models.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    39
    References
    2
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []