Published October 20, 2015 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Genetic load, inbreeding depression and hybrid vigor covary with population size: an empirical evaluation of theoretical predictions

  • 1. University of Fribourg
  • 2. Centre d'Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive

Description

Reduced population size is thought to have strong consequences for evolutionary processes as it enhances the strength of genetic drift. In its interaction with selection, this is predicted to increase the genetic load, reduce inbreeding depression, and increase hybrid vigour, and in turn affect phenotypic evolution. Several of these predictions have been tested, but comprehensive studies controlling for confounding factors are scarce. Here we show that populations of Daphnia magna, which vary strongly in genetic diversity, also differ in genetic load, inbreeding depression, and hybrid vigor in a way that strongly supports theoretical predictions: Inbreeding depression is positively correlated with genetic diversity (a proxy for Ne), and genetic load and hybrid vigour are negatively correlated with genetic diversity. These patterns remain significant after accounting for potential confounding factors and indicate that, in small populations, a large proportion of the segregation load is converted into fixed load. Overall, the results suggest that the nature of genetic variation for fitness-related traits differs strongly between large and small populations. This has large consequences for evolutionary processes in natural populations, such as selection on dispersal, breeding systems, ageing, and local adaptation.

Notes

Files

life_history.csv

Files (124.6 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:01a09ee780deb6c59aa7a9ee03ff7512
114.5 kB Preview Download
md5:00621e7c161819caf25ea849d8388c18
10.1 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1111/evo.12802 (DOI)