Skip to main content
SLU publication database (SLUpub)

Research article1997Peer reviewed

The effect of delayed population growth on the genetic differentiation of local populations subject to frequent extinctions and recolonizations

Ingvarsson, PK

Abstract

Investigated the effects of delayed population growth on the genetic differentiation among populations subjected to local extinction and recolonization, for two different migration functions; (1) a constant migration rate, and (2) a constant number of migrants. A delayed period of population growth reduces the size of the newly founded populations for one or several generations. Whether this increases differentiation among local populations depends on the actual pattern of migration. With a constant migration rate, fewer migrants move into small populations than into large, thus providing ample opportunity for drift to act within a population. A prolonged period of population growth thus makes the conditions for enhanced differentiation between local populations less restrictive and also inflates the actual levels of differentiation. The effect depends on the relative magnitudes of k(e), the effective number of colonizers and k, the actual number of colonizers. When there is a constant number of migrants into a population per generation, migration into small populations is increased. This increase of migration in small populations counteracts the effects of genetic drift due to small population size. It increases the rate by which populations approach equilibrium, as small populations are swamped by migrants from larger populations closer to genetic equilibrium, and overall levels of differentiation are thus reduced. I also discuss situations for which the results of this paper are relevant.

Keywords

extinction; genetic differentiation; migration; population growth; population structure; recolonization

Published in

Evolution
1997, Volume: 51, number: 1, pages: 29-35
Publisher: SOC STUDY EVOLUTION

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Evolutionary Biology
    Genetics

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.2307/2410957

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/84143