- THIS ARTICLE
- Full Text (PDF)
- Alert me when this article is cited
- Alert me if a correction is posted
- SERVICES
- Similar articles in this journal
- Similar articles in PubMed
- Alert me to new issues of the journal
- Download to citation manager
- Reprints & Permissions
- CITING ARTICLES
- Citing Articles via HighWire
- Citing Articles via Google Scholar
- GOOGLE SCHOLAR
- Articles by Nagylaki, T.
- Search for Related Content
- PUBMED
- PubMed Citation
- Articles by Nagylaki, T.
CLINES WITH VARIABLE MIGRATION
Thomas Nagylaki 1
1 Department of Biophysics and Theoretical Biology, University
of Chicago, 920 East 58th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637
The consequences of a discontinuity in the migration rate and of a geographical barrier in the habitat are studied in a diffusion model of migration and selection. The treatment is restricted to a single diallelic locus in a monoecious population in the absence of mutation and random drift. It is supposed further that migration is independent of genotype, the population density remains constant and uniform, and Hardy-Weinberg proportions obtain locally. It is shown that a discontinuity in the migration rate leads to a jump in the slope of the gene frequency, but not in the gene frequency itself, while a localized geographical barrier has precisely the opposite effect. These features of the gene frequency behavior are quantitatively related to the migration rate. The influence of the above inhomogeneities in migration on the maintenance of an allele in an environmental pocket is examined. The extent to which the critical condition for polymorphism is made less stringent by decreased migration outside the pocket and by a geographical barrier between the pocket and the rest of the habitat is evaluated.
Submitted on October 23, 1975
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
L. E. B. Kruuk, S. J. E. Baird, K. S. Gale, and N. H. Barton A Comparison of Multilocus Clines Maintained by Environmental Adaptation or by Selection Against Hybrids Genetics, December 1, 1999; 153(4): 1959 - 1971. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
