Fixation of advantageous alleles in partially self-fertilizing populations: The effect of different selection modes

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Abstract

The expected fixation probability of an advantageous allele was examined in a partially self-fertilizing hermaphroditic plant species using the diffusion approximation. The selective advantage of the advantageous allele was assumed to be increased viability, increased fecundity, or an increase in male fitness. The mode of selection, as well as the selfing rate, the population size, and the dominance of the advantageous allele, affect the fixation probability of the allele. In general it was found that increases in selfing rate decrease the fixation probability under male sexual selection, increase fixation probability under fecundity selection, and increase when recessive and decrease when dominant under viability selection. In some cases the highest fixation probability of advantageous alleles under fecundity or under male sexual selection occurred at an intermediary selfing rate. The expected mean fixation times of the advantageous allele were also examined using the diffusion approximation.

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Damgaard, C. (2000). Fixation of advantageous alleles in partially self-fertilizing populations: The effect of different selection modes. Genetics, 154(2), 813–821. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/154.2.813

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