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  6. High variance in reproductive success generates a false signature of a genetic bottleneck in populations of constant size: a simulation study
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High variance in reproductive success generates a false signature of a genetic bottleneck in populations of constant size: a simulation study

Date Issued
October 16, 2013
Author(s)
Hoban, Sean M.
Mezzavilla, Massimo
Gaggiotti, Oscar E.
Benazzo, Andrea
van Oosterhout, Cock
Bertorelle, Giorgio
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/15656
Abstract

Background


Demographic bottlenecks can severely reduce the genetic variation of a population or a species. Establishing whether low genetic variation is caused by a bottleneck or a constantly low effective number of individuals is important to understand a species’ ecology and evolution, and it has implications for conservation management. Recent studies have evaluated the power of several statistical methods developed to identify bottlenecks. However, the false positive rate, i.e. the rate with which a bottleneck signal is misidentified in demographically stable populations, has received little attention. We analyse this type of error (type I) in forward computer simulations of stable populations having greater than Poisson variance in reproductive success (i.e., variance in family sizes). The assumption of Poisson variance underlies bottleneck tests, yet it is commonly violated in species with high fecundity.

Results

With large variance in reproductive success (Vk ≥ 40, corresponding to a ratio between effective and census size smaller than 0.1), tests based on allele frequencies, allelic sizes, and DNA sequence polymorphisms (heterozygosity excess, M-ratio, and Tajima’s D test) tend to show erroneous signals of a bottleneck. Similarly, strong evidence of population decline is erroneously detected when ancestral and current population sizes are estimated with the model based method MSVAR.

Conclusions

Our results suggest caution when interpreting the results of bottleneck tests in species showing high variance in reproductive success. Particularly in species with high fecundity, computer simulations are recommended to confirm the occurrence of a population bottleneck.

Subjects

Conservation

Heterozygosity excess...

M-ratio

MSVAR

FPR

Sweepstakes reproduct...

Type I error

Variance in reproduct...

Disciplines
Bioinformatics
Biology
Embargo Date
November 6, 2013
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

1471_2105_14_309.pdf

Size

493.62 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

c7625c870e3c585f439ec025e55e4699

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