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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Evolutionary Biology Année : 2009

Strong effects of heterosis on the evolution of dispersal rates

Résumé

When dispersal is limited, crosses between different regions may generate progeny of higher fitness than crosses within regions, due to the fact that individuals from the same region are more likely to share the same recessive deleterious alleles. This phenomenon (termed heterosis) generates a selective force favouring dispersal; however, the importance of heterosis on dispersal evolution has been a subject for debate. In this paper, we use computer simulations representing deleterious mutations occurring over a whole genome (of arbitrary map length R) to explore the magnitude of heterosis, and its effect on the evolution of dispersal. These results show that heterosis may have important effects on dispersal when it is in the upper range of values observed in natural populations, which occurs in our simulations when the genomic deleterious mutation rate U is also in the upper range of observed values. Comparing the results with extrapolations from an analytical two-locus model indicates that the effect of heterosis is mainly driven by pairwise associations between the locus affecting dispersal and selected loci when U is not too high (roughly, U < 0.5), whereas higher order associations become important for higher values of U.
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Dates et versions

halsde-00419064 , version 1 (22-09-2009)

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Denis Roze, Francois Rousset. Strong effects of heterosis on the evolution of dispersal rates. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 2009, 22 (6), pp.1221-1233. ⟨10.1111/j.1420-9101.2009.01735.x⟩. ⟨halsde-00419064⟩
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