Abstract
Post-reproductive lifespan is a common trait among mammals and is usually considered to be neutral; i. e. with no influence on population dynamics. Here, we explore the role of postreproductive lifespan in the fixation probability of beneficial genetic variation. We compare two separate, stationary populations living in a constant environment that are equivalent except for the average time their respective members spend in the post-reproductive stage of life. Using a recently derived approximation, we show that fixation of a beneficial mutation is more likely in the population with greater post-reproductive longevity. This finding is surprising, as the population with more prolonged post-reproductive lifespan has smaller effective size and the classic population-genetic model would suggest that decreasing effective size reduces fixation chances of beneficial mutations. Yet, as we explain, in the age-structured case, when effective size gets smaller because of longer post-reproductive lifespan but census size is kept equal, a beneficial mutation has a higher likelihood to get fixed because it finds itself at higher initial frequency. Copyright:
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CITATION STYLE
Giaimo, S., & Baudisch, A. (2015). The effect of post-reproductive lifespan on the fixation probability of beneficial mutations. PLoS ONE, 10(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0133820
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