Decay of genetic variability in geographically structured populations.
- 1 June 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 74 (6) , 2523-2525
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.74.6.2523
Abstract
The ultimate rate and pattern of approach to equilibrium of a diploid, monoecious population subdivided into a finite number of equal, large, panmictic colonies are calculated. The analysis is restricted to a single locus in the absence of selection, and every mutant is assumed to be new to the population. It is supposed that either the time-independent backward migration pattern is symmetric in the sense that the probability that an individual at position x migrated from y equals the probability that one at y migrated from x, or it depends only on displacements and not on initial and final positions. Generations are discrete and nonoverlapping. Asymptotically, the rate of convergence is approximately (I-u)2t[I-(2NT)-1]t, where u, NT, and t denote the mutation rate, total population size, and time in generations, respectively; the transient part of the probability that two homologous genes are the same allele is approximately independent of their spatial separation. Thus, in this respect the population behaves as if it were panmictic.This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- The decay of genetic variability in geographically structured populations. IITheoretical Population Biology, 1976
- Heterozygosity and relationship in regularly subdivided populationsTheoretical Population Biology, 1975
- The Decay of Genetic Variability in Geographically Structured PopulationsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1974
- Analysis of population structure: II. Two‐dimensional stepping sone models of finite length and other geographically structured populations*Annals of Human Genetics, 1971
- Structure of the R r tandem duplication in maize.1971
- Effective number of alleles in a subdivided populationTheoretical Population Biology, 1970
- Analysis of population structureAnnals of Human Genetics, 1970
- On the rate of decrease of heterozygosity in circular stepping stone models of populationsTheoretical Population Biology, 1970
- THE STEPPING STONE MODEL OF POPULATION STRUCTURE AND THE DECREASE OF GENETIC CORRELATION WITH DISTANCEGenetics, 1964