Population structure Flashcards
1
Q
what is Wright’s F statistic?
A
- Fst = fixation index of subpops relative to the total population
- 1940
- Sewall Wright: Theory of Isolation by distance
- F = Wrights fixation index (not linear) between 1 and 0
- results in population structure –> reduction in average proportion of heterozygotes relative to expected under random mating
- we use this reduction as a measure for differentiation between populations / regions
2
Q
what is the Fst equation?
A
Fst = (HT - Hs) / HT or 1 - Hs / HT
3
Q
expected heterozygosity / diversity?
A
He = average over many loci (if HW and 2 alleles h/He = 2pq or 1 - p^2 - q^2, if more than 2 alleles h/He = 1 - Epi^2)
- Hs = within subpopulations
- HT = Total across all samples (species level)
- often the expected heterozygosity (He) doesn’t equal observed heterozygosity (Ho) (aka no HWE)
- often He > Ho - except for heterozygote advantage and disassortative mating
4
Q
why would we see a deficit of heterozygotes?
A
- selection
- non-random mating
- population structure –> subdivision in a pop
5
Q
why is population structure caused?
A
- random loss of alleles in each subpop, founder effects, different selection pressures
- if homogenising effect of migration is smaller than the diversifying effect of drift and selection