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Founder effect

(Redirected from Founding population)

For the concept in organizations, see Founder's syndrome
Founder effect:Simple illustration of founder effect.  The original population is on the left with three possible founder populations on the right.
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Simple illustration of founder effect. The original population is on the left with three possible founder populations on the right.

The founder effect was defined by Ernst Mayr in 1963 to be the effect of establishing a new population by a small number of individuals, carrying only a small fraction of the original population's genetic variation. As a result, the new population may be distinctively different, both genetically and phenotypically, from the parent population from which it is derived.

In the figure shown, the original population has nearly equal numbers of blue and red individuals. The three smaller founder populations show that one or the other color may predominate (founder effect), due to random sampling of the original population. A population bottleneck can also cause a founder effect even though it isn't strictly a new population.

In addition to founder effects, the new population is often very small and shows random genetic drift, and an increase in inbreeding due to small population size.

The concept is usually seen in a context of subsequent population growth. Such populations that have recently arisen from small founder populations will exhibit reduced genetic variation due to the population bottleneck. The genetics of Easter Islanders and those native to Pitcairn Island provide examples of such a gene pool of limited variation.

Founder effects are common in island ecology, but the isolation need not be geographical. For example, the Amish populations in the United States, which have grown from a very few founders, have not recruited newcomers, and tend to marry within the community, exhibit founder effects. Though still rare absolutely, phenomena such as polydactyly (extra fingers and toes, a symptom of Ellis-van Creveld syndrome) are more common in Amish communities than in the US population at large.

An effective founder population consists only of those whose genetic print is identifiable in subsequent populations. Because in sexual reproduction, genetic recombination ensures that with each generation only half the genetic material of a parent is represented in the offspring, some genetic lines may die out entirely, even though there are numerous progeny. A recent study (Hey 2005) concluded that of the people migrating across the Bering land bridge at the close of the ice age, only 70 left their genetic print in modern descendants, a minute effective founder population— which is easily misread as though implying that only 70 people crossed to North America. The misinterpretations of "Mitochondrial Eve" are a case in point: it may be hard to explain that a "mitochondrial Eve" was not the only woman of her time.

Founder populations are essential to the study of island biogeography. A natural tabula rasa is not easily found, but a classic series of studies on founder population effects were done following the catastrophic 1883 eruption of Krakatau (Krakatoa), which erased all life on the island remnant. Another ongoing study has been following the biocolonization of Surtsey, Iceland, a new volcanic island that erupted offshore between 1963 and 1967. An earlier event, the Toba eruption in Sumatra of about 73,000 YBP, covered much of India with 3–6 m of ash, and must have coated the Nicobar Islands and Andaman Islands, much nearer in the ash fallout cone, with life-smothering layers, restarting their biodiversity from effectively zero.

The effective founder population of Quebec was only 2,600. After twelve to sixteen generations, with an eighty-fold growth but minimal gene dilution from intermarriage, Quebec has what geneticists call optimal linkage disequilibrium (genetic sharing) [1]. The result: far fewer genetic variations, including those that have been well studied because they are connected with inheritable diseases.

Another example is the large amount of cleidocranial dysostosis in the Muslim population section in South Africa, caused by descent from one affected Chinese man who settled in South Africa and converted to Islam.

In extreme cases the founder effect is thought to lead to the speciation and subsequent evolution of new species.

The founder effect is a feature that can also occur in memetic evolution.


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Topics in population genetics

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Key concepts: Hardy-Weinberg law | genetic linkage | linkage disequilibrium | Fisher's fundamental theorem | neutral theory
Selection: natural | sexual | artificial | ecological
Effects of selection on genomic variation: genetic hitchhiking | background selection
Genetic drift: small population size | population bottleneck | founder effect | coalescence
Founders: R.A. Fisher | J.B.S. Haldane | Sewall Wright
Related topics: evolution | microevolution | evolutionary game theory | fitness landscape | genetic genealogy
List of evolutionary biology topics

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Ecology | Population genetics

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