The standard temporal method for estimating effective population size (Ne) assumes that generations are discrete, but it is routinely applied to species with overlapping generations. We evaluated bias in the estimates ˆNe caused by violation of this assumption, using simulated data for three model species: humans (type I survival), sparrow (type II), and barnacle (type III). We verify a previous proposal by Felsenstein that weighting individuals by reproductive value is the correct way to calculate parametric population allele frequencies, in which case the rate of change in age-structured populations conforms to that predicted by discrete-generation models. When the standard temporal method is applied to age structured species, typical sam...
1.A population's effective size (Ne) is a key parameter that shapes rates of inbreeding and loss of ...
If not actively managed, small and isolated populations lose their genetic variability and the inbre...
How life-history strategies influence the evolution of populations is not well understood. Most exis...
The standard temporal method for estimating effective population size (Ne) assumes that generations ...
Although most genetic estimates of contemporary effective population size (Ne) are based on models t...
Use of single-sample genetic methods to estimate effective population size has skyrocketed in recent...
Indirect genetic methods are frequently used to estimate the effective population size (Ne) or effec...
AbstractThe variance effective population size for age structured populations is generally hard to e...
Estimates of effective population size are critical for species of conservation concern. Genetic dat...
Effective population size (Ne) determines the strength of genetic drift in a population and has long...
Due to practical difficulties in obtaining direct genetic estimates of effective sizes, conservation...
The concept of effective population size (Ne) is based on an elegantly simple idea which, however, r...
Analysis of linkage disequilibrium (ȓ2=mean squared correlation of allele frequencies at different g...
We describe a new method and a computer program SALMONNb to calculate the effective number of breede...
Genetic datasets can be used to date evolutionary events, even on recent time scales if sufficient d...
1.A population's effective size (Ne) is a key parameter that shapes rates of inbreeding and loss of ...
If not actively managed, small and isolated populations lose their genetic variability and the inbre...
How life-history strategies influence the evolution of populations is not well understood. Most exis...
The standard temporal method for estimating effective population size (Ne) assumes that generations ...
Although most genetic estimates of contemporary effective population size (Ne) are based on models t...
Use of single-sample genetic methods to estimate effective population size has skyrocketed in recent...
Indirect genetic methods are frequently used to estimate the effective population size (Ne) or effec...
AbstractThe variance effective population size for age structured populations is generally hard to e...
Estimates of effective population size are critical for species of conservation concern. Genetic dat...
Effective population size (Ne) determines the strength of genetic drift in a population and has long...
Due to practical difficulties in obtaining direct genetic estimates of effective sizes, conservation...
The concept of effective population size (Ne) is based on an elegantly simple idea which, however, r...
Analysis of linkage disequilibrium (ȓ2=mean squared correlation of allele frequencies at different g...
We describe a new method and a computer program SALMONNb to calculate the effective number of breede...
Genetic datasets can be used to date evolutionary events, even on recent time scales if sufficient d...
1.A population's effective size (Ne) is a key parameter that shapes rates of inbreeding and loss of ...
If not actively managed, small and isolated populations lose their genetic variability and the inbre...
How life-history strategies influence the evolution of populations is not well understood. Most exis...