Genetics, Vol. 148, 2029-2039, April 1998, Copyright © 1998

Genetic Diversity at a Single Locus Under Viability Selection and Facultative Apomixis: Equilibrium Structure and Deviations from Hardy-Weinberg Frequencies

R. Deborah Overatha and Marjorie A. Asmussena
a Department of Genetics, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602

Corresponding author: R. Deborah Overath, Department of Genetics, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-7223. E-mail address: overath@bscr.uga.edu.

Communicating editor: A. H. D. BROWN

We extensively analyze the maintenance of genetic variation and deviations from Hardy-Weinberg frequencies at a diallelic locus under mixed mating with apomixis and constant viability selection. Analytical proofs show that: (1) at most one polymorphic equilibrium exists, (2) polymorphism requires overdominant or underdominant selection, and (3) a simple, modified overdominance condition is sufficient to maintain genetic variation. In numerical analyses, only overdominant polymorphic equilibria are stable, and these are stable whenever they exist, which happens for ~78% of random fitness and mating parameters. The potential for maintaining both alleles increases with increasing apomixis or outcrossing and decreasing selfing. Simulations also indicate that equilibrium levels of heterozygosity will often be statistically indistinguishable from Hardy-Weinberg frequencies and that adults, not seeds, should usually be censused to maximize detecting deviations. Furthermore, although both censuses more often have an excess rather than a deficit of heterozygotes, analytical sign analyses of the fixation indices prove that, overall, adults are more likely to have an excess and seeds a deficit at equilibrium.





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