In this review some simple models of asexual populations evolving on smooth
landscapes are studied. The basic model is based on a cellular automaton, which
is analyzed here in the spatial mean-field limit. Firstly, the evolution on a
fixed fitness landscape is considered. The correspondence between the time
evolution of the population and equilibrium properties of a statistical
mechanics system is investigated, finding the limits for which this mapping
holds. The mutational meltdown, Eigen's error threshold and Muller's ratchet
phenomena are studied in the framework of a simplified model. Finally, the
shape of a quasi-species and the condition of coexistence of multiple species
in a static fitness landscape are analyzed. In the second part, these results
are applied to the study of the coexistence of quasi-species in the presence of
competition, obtaining the conditions for a robust speciation effect in asexual
populations.Comment: 36 pages, including 16 figures, to appear in Annual Review of
Computational Physics, D. Stauffer (ed.), World Scientific, Singapor