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Behavior and Genetic Variation in Natural Populations
Authors:SELANDER   ROBERT K.
Affiliation:Department of Zoology, University of Texas Austin, Texas 78712
Abstract:
An analysis of allelic variation at genetic loci controllingseveral esterases and hemoglobin, as demonstrated by electrophoresis,indicates that wild populations of the house mouse (Mus musculus)are characterized by fine-scale genetic subdivision, which,through the territorial behavior of family groups (tribes),is achieved even in the absence of physical or ecological barriersto migration. Heterogeneity in allele frequencies among samples from farmsin the same region and from barns on the same farm was demonstrated.Spatial variation in allele frequencies within single barns,involving a clustering of like genotypes, was shown by grid-trapping,thus providing direct evidence of tribal subdivision in continuouslydistributed populations. For two loci, Es-3 and Hbb, an excess of heterozygotes appearedin samples from small populations, while a deficit characterizedsamples from large populations. The evolutionary significance of subdivision and consequentdrift in house mouse populations cannot properly be evaluatedat this time. Although stochastic processes may play the dominantrole in determining, at a given locus, the genotypes of individualsand frequencies of alleles in small populations, geographicpatterns of variation, as studied in Texas, are characterizedby uniformity of allelic frequency in major physiographic orclimatic regions, as would be expected if selection is determiningthe frequencies.
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