Genealogies in bistable waves
Alison Etheridge, Sarah Penington

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the genealogy of advantageous alleles in a spatially structured diploid population under selection, showing convergence to a Kingman coalescent, contrasting with other selection models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that under certain spatial and selective conditions, the genealogy converges to a Kingman coalescent, providing new insights into genetic ancestry in spatial models.
Findings
Genealogies near the wavefront converge to Kingman coalescent.
Contrasts with Bolthausen-Sznitman coalescent in directional selection.
Uses tracer dynamics to establish convergence.
Abstract
We study a model of selection acting on a diploid population (one in which each individual carries two copies of each gene) living in one spatial dimension. We suppose a particular gene appears in two forms (alleles) and , and that individuals carrying have a higher fitness than individuals, while individuals have a lower fitness than both and individuals. The proportion of advantageous alleles expands through the population approximately according to a travelling wave. We prove that on a suitable timescale, the genealogy of a sample of alleles taken from near the wavefront converges to a Kingman coalescent as the population density goes to infinity. This contrasts with the case of directional selection in which the corresponding limit is thought to be the Bolthausen-Sznitman coalescent. The proof uses 'tracer dynamics'.
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolution and Genetic Dynamics · Mathematical and Theoretical Epidemiology and Ecology Models · Evolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation
