Private Polymorphisms: How Many? How Old? How Useful for Genetic Taxonomies?
✍ Scribed by E.A. Thompson; J.V. Neel
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 213 KB
- Volume
- 5
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1055-7903
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The data on the distribution and frequencies of private polymorphisms in the tribal populations of Central and South America are used to address the question of the extent to which such data can be used to address questions of phylogenetic history. It is shown that due to the great increases in population number that accompanied agricultural development, most private polymorphisms have arisen since population settlement and tribal differentiation. Conversely, the absence of Amerindian variants of wide distribution confirms the small size of the hemispheric population until relatively recent times. Patterns of recent population decline and recovery that accompanied European contact since 1492 have also had a strong impact on the age distribution of extant variants, eliminating many that were relatively young in 1492. The majority of surviving variants that have achieved polymorphic frequencies in a tribe or group of tribes are from 100 to 400 generations old (2500 to 10,000 years). Such genetic variants thus characterize tribes, or groups of closely related tribes, but do not provide a greater time depth of phylogenetic history.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The city of Bahía Blanca occupies a strategic place in Argentina south of the Pampean region in the north‐east corner of the Patagonia. Since 1828, this city has been the historical and political border between Amerindian lands in the south, and the lands of European colonists. Nowadays
## Section IV. What are some of the best organisms for developmental genetics? How can the study of genetic interactions help us to understand the function of complex macromolecular assemblies? How can a single mutation be used as a probe to identify other genes that are involved in the producti