Abstract

It is well known that in a subdivided population subject to soft selection with two alleles at one locus, instability of both fixation states (a “protected polymorphism”) entails at least one stable polymorphic equilibrium. Although stable polymorphic and monomorphic equilibria can coexist in general, a stable fixation state (monomorphic equilibrium) precludes the existence of any polymorphic equilibrium under the circumstances of haploid or submultiplicative diploid viabilities. This provides that a stable monomorphism is robust against random fluctuations in allele frequencies. It also increases the known circumstances where there is a unique globally attracting stable equilibrium, i.e., where allele frequencies are determined by the selection-migration structure independent of the history of the system.

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