The purpose of this study was to analyze population longevity relative to homicide and suicide deaths in light of competing risks. Mortality data by age and sex derived from Vital Statistics and data from the US. Census were utilized to calculate life tables. The causes of death for this study were
Dispersal, effective population size, and the genetic structure of the contemporary United States
โ Scribed by Walter D. Koenig
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 504 KB
- Volume
- 2
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1042-0533
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
I estimate effective population size (N,) and the inbreeding coefficient (FST) for contemporary United States using Wright's isolation by distance model (Wright: Genetics 28:114-138,1943) and parent-offspring dispersal distances obtained from individuals surveyed as part of a study of modern dispersal patterns. N, is estimated to be minimally 3.61 x lo7 and more likely closer to 8.05 X lo7; based on these values, FST is between 1.59 x l o p 7 and 9.28 x lop9, depending on whether it is measured relative to the United States population or the world at large. Not all the assumptions of the isolation by distance model are met by modern populations, and thus the results must be interpreted with caution. They suggest, however, that both mobility within and immigration into contemporary United States are great enough to make the probability of inbreeding and random genetic drift negligible factors in producing future evolutionary change. In contrast, gene flow, acting as both a constraint against geographic differentiation within the United States and by introducing new genes via international immigration, is likely to be a dominant evolutionary force in this population.
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