Models of evolution of reproductive isolation

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Abstract

Mathematical models are presented for the evolution of postmating and premating reproductive isolation. In the case of postmating isolation it is assumed that hybrid sterility or inviability is caused by incompatibility of alleles at one or two loci, and evolution of reproductive isolation occurs by random fixation of different incompatibility alleles in different populations. Mutations are assumed to occur following either the stepwise mutation model or the infinite-allele model. Computer simulations by using ITO's stochastic differential equations have shown that in the model used the reproductive isolation mechanism evolves faster in small populations that in large populations when the mutation rate remains the same. In populations of a given size it evolves faster when the number of loci involved is large than when this is small. In general, however, evolution of isolation mechanisms is a very slow process, and it would take thousands to millions of generations if the mutation rate is of the order of 10-5 per generation. Since gene substitution occurs as a stochastic process, the time required for the establishment of reproductive isolation has a large variance.

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APA

Nei, M., Maruyama, T., & Wu, C. (1983). Models of evolution of reproductive isolation. Genetics, 103(3), 557–579. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/103.3.557

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