Effective Size of a Fluctuating Age-Structured Population
Author(s) -
Steinar Engen,
Russell Lande,
BerntErik Sæther
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1534/genetics.104.028233
Subject(s) - population size , effective population size , biology , population , generation time , constant (computer programming) , statistics , genetic drift , plant reproductive morphology , mendelian inheritance , genetics , mathematics , evolutionary biology , statistical physics , demography , ecology , genetic variation , physics , sociology , computer science , gene , programming language
Previous theories on the effective size of age-structured populations assumed a constant environment and, usually, a constant population size and age structure. We derive formulas for the variance effective size of populations subject to fluctuations in age structure and total population size produced by a combination of demographic and environmental stochasticity. Haploid and monoecious or dioecious diploid populations are analyzed. Recent results from stochastic demography are employed to derive a two-dimensional diffusion approximation for the joint dynamics of the total population size, N, and the frequency of a selectively neutral allele, p. The infinitesimal variance for p, multiplied by the generation time, yields an expression for the effective population size per generation. This depends on the current value of N, the generation time, demographic stochasticity, and genetic stochasticity due to Mendelian segregation, but is independent of environmental stochasticity. A formula for the effective population size over longer time intervals incorporates deterministic growth and environmental stochasticity to account for changes in N.
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