The consequences of gene flow for local adaptation and differentiation: A two-locus two-deme model
Ada Akerman, Reinhard B\"urger

TL;DR
This paper models how gene flow, recombination, and selection across two linked loci in a subdivided population influence local adaptation, differentiation, and the potential for genomic divergence, providing explicit analytical conditions for these processes.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive analytical framework for understanding multilocus local adaptation under various migration and recombination scenarios, including invasion conditions for beneficial mutants.
Findings
Stable polymorphism exists below a critical migration rate.
Linkage facilitates invasion of beneficial mutants.
Genomic islands of divergence can emerge due to linkage and migration patterns.
Abstract
We consider a population subdivided into two demes connected by migration in which selection acts in opposite direction. We explore the effects of recombination and migration on the maintenance of multilocus polymorphism, on local adaptation, and on differentiation by employing a deterministic model with genic selection on two linked diallelic loci (i.e., no dominance or epistasis). For the following cases, we characterize explicitly the possible equilibrium configurations: weak, strong, highly asymmetric, and super-symmetric migration, no or weak recombination, and independent or strongly recombining loci. For independent loci (linkage equilibrium) and for completely linked loci, we derive the possible bifurcation patterns as functions of the total migration rate, assuming all other parameters are fixed but arbitrary. For these and other cases, we determine analytically the maximum…
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