A Survey on Migration-Selection Models in Population Genetics
Reinhard B\"urger

TL;DR
This survey reviews mathematical models of population genetics focusing on selection and migration in fragmented habitats, emphasizing equilibrium analysis, stability, and recent multilocus developments.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of deterministic population genetic models with new insights into multilocus and speciation-related models.
Findings
Analysis of equilibrium and stability structures.
Conditions for internal equilibria in models.
Application to a two-locus speciation model.
Abstract
This survey focuses on the most important aspects of the mathematical theory of population genetic models of selection and migration between discrete niches. Such models are most appropriate if the dispersal distance is short compared to the scale at which the environment changes, or if the habitat is fragmented. The general goal of such models is to study the influence of population subdivision and gene flow among subpopulations on the amount and pattern of genetic variation maintained. Only deterministic models are treated. Because space is discrete, they are formulated in terms of systems of nonlinear difference or differential equations. A central topic is the exploration of the equilibrium and stability structure under various assumptions on the patterns of selection and migration. Another important, closely related topic concerns conditions (necessary or sufficient) for fully…
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