Abstract

The influence of spatial variation in the carrying capacity and migration rate of a geographical barrier on the one-dimensional stepping-stone model is studied. The monoecious, diploid population is subdivided into an infinite linear array of panmictic colonies that exchange gametes. In each deme, the rate of self-fertilization is equal to the reciprocal of the number of individuals in that deme. Generations are discrete and nonoverlapping; the analysis is restricted to a single locus in the absence of selection; every allele mutates to new alleles at the same rate. In the diffusion approximation, a partial differential equation that incorporates spatial (and temporal) variation in the carrying capacity and migration rate is derived for the probability of identity. Transition conditions that simultaneously take into account discontinuities in the carrying capacity and migration rate are established: the probability of identity is continuous, but its partial derivatives are not, their ratio being a simple function of the carrying capacities and migrational variance on the two sides of the inhomogeneity. The partial derivatives of the probability of identity are continuous across a geographical barrier, whereas the probability of identity itself has a discontinuity proportional to the partial derivative at the barrier, the constant of proportionality being a measure of the difficulty of crossing the barrier.

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