DefinitionsEffective population size may be defined in two ways, variance effective size and inbreeding effective size. These are closely linked, and derived from F-statistics. Variance effective sizeIn the Wright-Fisher idealized population model, the conditional variance of the allele frequency p', given the allele frequency p in the previous generation, is Let Inbreeding effective sizeAlternatively, the effective population size may be defined by noting how the inbreeding coefficient changes from one generation to the next, and then defining Ne as the size of the idealized population that has the same change in inbreeding. The presentation follows Kempthorne (1957). For the idealized population, the inbreeding coefficients follow the recurrence equation Using Panmictic Index (1 − F) instead of inbreeding coefficient, we get the approximate reccurrence equation The difference per generation is The inbreeding effective size can be found by solving This is although researchers rarely use this equation directly. ExamplesVariations in population sizePopulation size varies over time. Suppose there are t non-overlapping generations, then effective population size is given by the harmonic mean of the population sizes: For example, say the population size was N = 10, 100, 50, 80, 20, 500 for six generations (t = 6). Then the effective population size is the harmonic mean of these, giving:
Note this is less than the arithmetic mean of the population size, which in this example is 126.7. Of particular concern is the effect of a population bottleneck. Another way of calculating it Equation for calculating Ne for populations with variation in family size: Ne = (4N)/(Vk + 2) Where Vk is the variance in population size. Large variance in family size is bad because large variations in family size lead to inbreeding. DioeciousnessIf a population is dioecious, i.e. there is no self-fertilisation then or more generally, where D represents dioeciousness and may take the value 0 (for not dioecious) or 1 for dioecious. When N is large, Ne approximately equals N, so this is usually trivial and often ignored: Non-Fisherian sex-ratiosWhen the sex ratio of a population varies from the Fisherian 1:1 ratio, effective population size is given by: Where Nm is the number of males and Nf the number of females. For example, with 80 males and 20 females (an absolute population size of 100):
Again, this results in Ne being less than N. Unequal contributions to the next generationIf population size is to remain constant, each individual must contribute on average two gametes to the next generation. An idealized population assumes that this follows a Poisson distribution so that the variance of the number of gametes contributed, k is equal to the mean number contributed, i.e. 2: However, in natural populations the variance is larger than this, i.e. The effective population size is then given by: Note that if the variance of k is less than 2, Ne is greater than N. Heritable variation in fecundity, usually pushes Ne lower. Overlapping generations and age-structured populationsWhen organisms live longer than one breeding season, effective population sizes have to take into account the life tables for the species. HaploidAssume a haploid population with discrete age structure. An example might be an organism that can survive several discrete breeding seasons. Further, define the following age structure characteristics:
The generation time is calculated as
Then, the inbreeding effective population size is (Felsenstein 1971) DiploidSimilarly, the inbreeding effective number can be calculated for a diploid population with discrete age structure. This was first given by Johnson (1977), but the notation more closely resembles Emigh and Pollak (1979). Assume the same basic parameters for the life table as given for the Haploid case, but distinguishing between male and female, such as The inbreeding effective number is calculated from See alsoReferences
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