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The distribution of spontaneous mutations on quantitative traits and fitness in Drosophila melanogaster.

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TLDR
Starting from a completely homozygous population of Drosophila melanogaster, two groups of 100 inbred lines each were established and maintained for 46 generations, by a single brother-sister mating and two double first cousin matings, respectively, finding that the rate of between-line differentiation was independent of population size.
Abstract
Starting from a completely homozygous population of Drosophila melanogaster, two groups of 100 inbred lines each were established and maintained for 46 generations, by a single brother-sister mating and two double first cousin matings, respectively. Sternopleural bristle number, wing length and wing width were simultaneously scored in all lines every 4-5 generations. The means of four lines in each group departed significantly from the overall mean and, in each case, this was attributed to a single mutation of relatively large effect on at least one trait (0.3-1.4 environmental standard deviations in absolute value). Further analyses revealed widespread pleiotropy, similar gene action of a given mutation for all traits affected, and predominant additive action. No apparent association was found between the magnitudes of mutational effects on the traits and fitness. However, all recessive mutations were deleterious. The distribution of mutant effects was asymmetrical (positive for bristles and negative for wing measurements). Moreover, these distributions had a high variance and may be leptokurtic, due to the presence of major genes. Estimates of the ratio of new mutational variance to environmental variance ranged within (0.7-3.4) x 10(-3), those for wing measurements being generally larger. In agreement with theory, the rate of between-line differentiation was independent of population size.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mutation accumulation and the extinction of small populations

TL;DR: Application of empirical estimates of the properties of spontaneous deleterious mutations leads to the conclusion that populations with effective sizes smaller than 100 are highly vulnerable to extinction via a mutational meltdown on timescales of approximately 100 generations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk of population extinction from fixation of new deleterious mutations.

TL;DR: Data on the rate and magnitude of mildly deleterious mutations in Drosophila melanogaster indicate that even moderately large populations, with effective sizes on the order of Ne = 103, may incur a substantial risk of extinction from the fixation of new mutations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perspective: spontaneous deleterious mutation

TL;DR: A broad array of data are reviewed that collectively support the hypothesis that deleterious mutations arise in flies at rate of about one per individual per generation, with the average mutation decreasing fitness by about only 2% in the heterozygous state.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mutational meltdowns in sexual populations

TL;DR: Results based on computer simulations and supported by analytical approximations indicate that mutation accumulation in small, random‐mating monoecious populations can lead to mean extinction times less than a few hundred to a few thousand generations.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Analyzing tables of statistical tests

TL;DR: Technique non parametrique pour la signification statistique de tables de tests utilisees dans les etudes sur l'evolution notamment.
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Natural selection and random genetic drift in phenotypic evolution.

TL;DR: The concept of adaptive zones is clarified by the construction of an adaptive topography for the average phenotype in a population, which shows that with constant fitnesses theaverage phenotype evolves toward the nearest adaptive zone in the phenotype space, but if fitnesses are frequency-dependent the average phenotypes may evolve away from an adaptive zone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative genetics and fitness: lessons from Drosophila

Derek A. Roff, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1987 - 
TL;DR: Pattern of heritability and genetic covariance between traits in the genus Drosophila supports the variable pleiotropy hypothesis but other factors such as environmental heterogeneity, or mutation cannot be excluded.
Journal ArticleDOI

Restricted maximum likelihood to estimate variance components for animal models with several random effects using a derivative-free algorithm

TL;DR: Estimates are obtained by evaluating the likelihood explicitly and using standard, derivative-free optimization procedures to locate its maximum by the so-called Animal Model, which includes the additive genetic merit of animals as a random effect, and incorporates all information on relationships between animals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phenotypic evolution by neutral mutation

TL;DR: A general model is developed for predicting the genetic variance within populations and the rate of divergence of population mean phenotypes for quantitative traits under the joint operation of random sampling drift and mutation in the absence of selection and it is found that the simple predictions obtained by previous investigators using additive‐genetic models hold reasonably well.
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