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Inbreeding. A 1 A 1. A 1 A 2. A 2 A 2. A 1 A 1. A 2 A 2. A 1 A 2. A 1 A 1. A 2 A 2. A 1 A 2. A 1 A 1. A 2 A 2. A 1 A 2. Calculating inbreeding coefficients from pedigrees. half-sib mating. F = probability of [(a) or (b)] = 1/16 + 1/16 = 1/8. Outbred population. *. *. *. X. *.
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A1A1 A1A2 A2A2 A1A1 A2A2 A1A2 A1A1 A2A2 A1A2 A1A1 A2A2 A1A2
Calculating inbreeding coefficients from pedigrees half-sib mating F = probability of [(a) or (b)] = 1/16 + 1/16 = 1/8
Outbred population * * * X * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Inbred population * * * X * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Consequences of inbreeding • inbreeding “exposes” deleterious recessive genes by making them homozygous • it causes a drop in fitness known as inbreeding depression inbreeding depression = decline in fitness (survivorship, reproductive success) due to mating with relatives
Inbreeding depression in plants is common from Futuyma (1998), p. 313
In experimental studies of plants, inbreeding depression is widespread. It is also the likely cause of lower fitness in small and endangered plant populations.
Classic studies of inbreeding in natural populations • van Noordwijk and Scharloo (1981) studied inbreeding in an island population of great tits (Parus major) in Holland • a small isolated population: • pedigree for entire population was determined by banding birds • inbreeding was common
Inbreeding depression in Parus major van Noordwijk and Scharloo (1981) Failure of egg hatching increased with the inbreeding coefficient of parents
However... • while hatching failure increased with inbreeding, hatchlings that did survive showed even higher success when they bred • over several generations, a similar effect may “purge” the genome of deleterious genes
Implications for conservation • inbreeding depression can be severe and its onset can be rapid • endangered populations with a “history” of inbreeding may actually show fewer effects • but, the immediate effects to an historically outbred population could drive it to extinction
Genetic restoration of greater prairie chickens • males display on communal breeding sites known as leks • the species depends on intact grassland habitat for survival
Number of males displaying on leks Prairie chickens in Illinois were nearly extinct by 1994. Birds were introduced from Nebraska, Kansas, and Minnesota.
Prior to introduction, there was a continuous decline in hatching success. Immediately after the introduction, hatching success improved.
Genetic restoration probably lowered inbreeding depression • assays of highly polymorphic microsatellite DNAs showed Illinois populations to be inbred prior to the introduction • this supports the inbreeding depression hypothesis for decline and recovery