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The age-specific force of natural selection and biodemographic walls of death
Contributed by Kenneth W. Wachter, April 10, 2013 (sent for review January 10, 2013)

Abstract
W. D. Hamilton’s celebrated formula for the age-specific force of natural selection furnishes predictions for senescent mortality due to mutation accumulation, at the price of reliance on a linear approximation. Applying to Hamilton’s setting the full nonlinear demographic model for mutation accumulation recently developed by Evans, Steinsaltz, and Wachter, we find surprising differences. Nonlinear interactions cause the collapse of Hamilton-style predictions in the most commonly studied case, refine predictions in other cases, and allow walls of death at ages before the end of reproduction. Haldane’s principle for genetic load has an exact but unfamiliar generalization.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: wachter{at}demog.berkeley.edu.
Author contributions: K.W.W., S.N.E., and D.S. designed research, performed research, analyzed data, and wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
See Commentary on page 10057.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1306656110/-/DCSupplemental.
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