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Inbreeding and extinction: Effects of rate of inbreeding
Authors:David H Reed  Edwin H Lowe  David A Briscoe  Richard Frankham
Institution:(1) Key Centre for Biodiversity and Bioresources, Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, NSW, 2109, Australia;(2) Present address: Department of Biology, The University of Mississippi, P. O. Box 1848, University, Mississippi, 38677-1848, USA)
Abstract:Deleterious alleles may be removed (purged) bynatural selection in populations undergoinginbreeding. However, there is controversyregarding the effectiveness of selection inreducing the risk of extinction due toinbreeding, especially in relation to the rateof inbreeding. We evaluated the effect of therate of inbreeding on reducing extinction risk,in populations of Drosophila melanogastermaintained using full-sib mating (160replicates), or at effective population sizes(N e) of 10 (80) or 20 (80).Extinction rates in the populations maintainedusing full-sib mating occurred at lower levelsof inbreeding than in the larger populations,whereas the two larger populations did notdiffer significantly from each other.Inbreeding coefficients at 50% extinction were0.62, 0.79 and 0.77 for the full-sib (N e = 2.6), N e = 10 and N e = 20 treatments, respectively. Populations of N e = 20 that remained extant after 60 generations, showed inbreeding depression, with the mean fitness of these populations being only 45% of the outbredcontrols. There was considerable variationamong the 31 inbred populations in fitness, butnone of the N e = 20 populations hadfitness that was higher than the outbredcontrol. We conclude that purging may slow therate of extinction slightly, but it cannot berelied on to eliminate the deleterious effectsof inbreeding.
Keywords:extinction  inbreeding depression  inbreeding rate  purging
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