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Establishment of a tetraploid cytotype in a diploid population : effect of relative fitness of the cytotypes
Auteur(s)
Felber, François
Date de parution
1991
In
Journal of evolutionary biology, Wiley, 1991/4/2/195-207
Résumé
The conditions for the establishment of a tetraploid in a diploid population were investigated by means of a deterministic model, on the assumption that the diploid cytotype produces some <i>2n</i> gametes. <br> If the fertility and viability of both cytotypes were the same and the initial population was diploid, then a mixed population would occur if the production of 2n gametes was below 17.16%. The tetraploid excluded the diploid above this limit. By modifying the fertility and the viability of the polyploid this threshold varied, dropping to 10% when one of the two parameters was twice that of the diploid, and falling to as low as 6% if both fertility and viability were double that of the diploid. <br> The conditions for the establishment of a polyploid are therefore quite restrictive under the assumptions of this model. In nature, such processes would probably allow the spread of the polyploid only if the immigration of polyploids considerably enhanced the frequency of tetraploids, or if genetical or environmental changes, or chance processes in small populations caused a substantial increase in the frequency of <i>2n</i> gametes produced by the diploid.
Identifiants
Type de publication
journal article
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