Fix A G
Am J Phys Anthropol. 1984 Oct;65(2):201-12. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.1330650213.
A Monte Carlo simulation based on the population structure of a small-scale human population, the Semai Senoi of Malaysia, has been developed to study the combined effects of group, kin, and individual selection. The population structure resembles D.S. Wilson's structured deme model in that local breeding populations (Semai settlements) are subdivided into trait groups (hamlets) that may be kin-structured and are not themselves demes. Additionally, settlement breeding populations are connected by two-dimensional stepping-stone migration approaching 30% per generation. Group and kin-structured group selection occur among hamlets the survivors of which then disperse to breed within the settlement population. Genetic drift is modeled by the process of hamlet formation; individual selection as a deterministic process, and stepping-stone migration as either random or kin-structured migrant groups. The mechanism for group selection is epidemics of infectious disease that can wipe out small hamlets particularly if most adults become sick and social life collapses. Genetic resistance to a disease is an individual attribute; however, hamlet groups with several resistant adults are less likely to disintegrate and experience high social mortality. A specific human gene, hemoglobin E, which confers resistance to malaria, is studied as an example of the process. The results of the simulations show that high genetic variance among hamlet groups may be generated by moderate degrees of kin-structuring. This strong microdifferentiation provides the potential for group selection. The effect of group selection in this case is rapid increase in gene frequencies among the total set of populations. In fact, group selection in concert with individual selection produced a faster rate of gene frequency increase among a set of 25 populations than the rate within a single unstructured population subject to deterministic individual selection. Such rapid evolution with plausible rates of extinction, individual selection, and migration and a population structure realistic in its general form, has implications for specific human polymorphisms such as hemoglobin variants and for the more general problem of the tempo of evolution as well.
基于马来西亚小规模人类群体塞迈·塞诺伊的人口结构,开发了一种蒙特卡罗模拟,以研究群体、亲属和个体选择的综合影响。该人口结构类似于D.S.威尔逊的结构化群落模型,即当地繁殖群体(塞迈定居点)被细分为性状群体(小村庄),这些性状群体可能是亲属结构的,且本身不是群落。此外,定居繁殖群体通过二维跳板迁移相连,每代迁移率接近30%。群体和亲属结构的群体选择发生在小村庄之间,幸存者随后分散到定居群体中繁殖。遗传漂变通过小村庄形成过程建模;个体选择作为一个确定性过程,跳板迁移作为随机或亲属结构的移民群体。群体选择的机制是传染病流行,这可能会消灭小村庄,特别是当大多数成年人患病且社会生活崩溃时。对疾病的遗传抗性是个体属性;然而,有几个抗性成年人的小村庄群体不太可能瓦解并经历高社会死亡率。作为该过程的一个例子,研究了一种赋予疟疾抗性的特定人类基因——血红蛋白E。模拟结果表明,适度的亲属结构可能会在小村庄群体中产生高遗传方差。这种强烈的微分化为群体选择提供了潜力。在这种情况下,群体选择的效果是基因频率在总群体中迅速增加。事实上,群体选择与个体选择协同作用,在一组25个群体中产生的基因频率增加速度比单个非结构化群体中确定性个体选择的速度要快。这种具有合理灭绝率、个体选择和迁移率以及一般形式现实的人口结构的快速进化,对血红蛋白变体等特定人类多态性以及进化速度这一更普遍的问题都有影响。