INCREASED GENETIC VARIANCE AFTER A POPULATION BOTTLENECK

被引:128
作者
CARSON, HL
机构
[1] Hampton Carson is at the Dept of Genetics, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii, Honolulu
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0169-5347(90)90137-3
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
A conventional view holds that population bottlenecks cause massive losses of genetic variability, thus endangering the viability of the derived population. Although some alleles that were infrequent in the parent population may be lost new empirical evidence from Drosophila and housefly populations has demonstrated that genetic variance available to selection may actually increase following a single severe bottleneck. Several theoretical models support this view, and suggest that the increase may result from conversion of balanced epistatic variance to additive variance that becomes immediately available to selection. These effects appear to be greatest on the inheritance of quantitative characters, releasing new variance through the disruption of covariance matrices that underlie and interrelate quantitative traits. Thus, character change in adaptation and speciation may, in some instances, be promoted by founder events. © 1990.
引用
收藏
页码:228 / 230
页数:3
相关论文
共 29 条
  • [1] Ives, Further Genetic Studies of the South Amherst Population of Drosophila melanogaster, Evolution, 24, pp. 507-518, (1970)
  • [2] Watanabe, Watanabe, Oshima, Evolution, 30, pp. 109-118, (1976)
  • [3] Dobzhansky, Science, 126, pp. 191-194, (1957)
  • [4] Takano, Kusakabe, Mukai, Genetics, 117, pp. 245-254, (1987)
  • [5] Nei, Maruyama, Chakraborty, Evolution, 29, pp. 1-10, (1975)
  • [6] Kimura, The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution, (1983)
  • [7] Carson, Evolutionary Processes and Theory, pp. 391-409, (1986)
  • [8] Carson, High Fitness of Heterokaryotypic Individuals Segregating Naturally within a Long-Standing Laboratory Population of Drosophila silvestris., Genetics, 116, pp. 415-422, (1987)
  • [9] Lints, Bourgois, Population crash, population flush and genetic variability in cage populations of Drosophila melanogaster, Genetics Selection Evolution, 16, pp. 45-56, (1984)
  • [10] Scossiroli, Int. Union Biol. Sci. Ser., 5, 15, pp. 42-56, (1954)