Department of Physics, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA.
G3 (Bethesda). 2023 Apr 11;13(4). doi: 10.1093/g3journal/jkad023.
Limited dispersal of individuals between generations results in isolation by distance, in which individuals further apart in space tend to be less related. Classic models of isolation by distance assume that dispersal distances are drawn from a thin-tailed distribution and predict that the proportion of the genome that is identical by descent between a pair of individuals should decrease exponentially with the spatial separation between them. However, in many natural populations, individuals occasionally disperse over very long distances. In this work, we use mathematical analysis and coalescent simulations to study the effect of long-range (power-law) dispersal on patterns of isolation by distance. We find that it leads to power-law decay of identity-by-descent at large distances with the same exponent as dispersal. We also find that broad power-law dispersal produces another, shallow power-law decay of identity-by-descent at short distances. These results suggest that the distribution of long-range dispersal events could be estimated from sequencing large population samples taken from a wide range of spatial scales.
个体在代际间的扩散能力有限,导致了地理隔离,即空间上相隔较远的个体往往亲缘关系较弱。经典的地理隔离模型假设扩散距离来自于长尾分布,并预测个体之间由共同祖先遗传而来的基因组比例应该随它们之间的空间分离呈指数下降。然而,在许多自然种群中,个体偶尔会进行长距离扩散。在这项工作中,我们使用数学分析和合并模拟来研究长距离(幂律)扩散对距离隔离模式的影响。我们发现,它导致了大距离上由共同祖先遗传而来的身份的幂律衰减,其衰减指数与扩散相同。我们还发现,广泛的幂律扩散在短距离上产生了另一个浅幂律衰减的由共同祖先遗传而来的身份。这些结果表明,可以从在广泛的空间尺度上采集的大量种群样本的测序中估计长距离扩散事件的分布。