Mechanisms of phenotypic trade-offs in the resource acquisition-allocation Y-model
Sanghvi, K.; Gascoigne, S. J. L.; Sepil, I.
Show abstract
Phenotypic trade-offs, predicted to occur due to resource constraints, are not commonly observed. This discrepancy is often explained by the Y-model, which shows that greater variation in resource acquisition (CVA) than variation in allocation strategy (CVX) masks among-individual phenotypic trade-offs. However, the Y-model is a heuristic rather than a quantitative tool with testable predictions. Additionally, the mechanisms modulating trade-offs in the model remain unclear. Here, we simulate different parameters of the Y-model to understand their influence. We find that CVA/(CVA + CVX) accurately predicts the direction and strength of phenotypic correlations. Contrary to common assumptions, the mean resource acquired by a population does not influence trade-offs; instead, the mean allocation strategy of a population does. Importantly, within-individual dependence of allocation on acquisition exacerbates the influence of mean allocation. This causes greater sensitivity of phenotypic correlations to changes in CVA or CVX, compared to independent resource acquisition and allocation strategies. We generate novel, testable hypotheses about trade-offs in the context of dietary restriction, plasticity, polymorphism, and pace-of-life, and validate our model with empirical data to demonstrate its robustness. By systematically partitioning the influence of means, variances, and covariance, in the acquisition-allocation Y-model, we provide a simple, generalisable, quantitative synthesis for understanding phenotypic trade-offs.
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