Genetic Drift and Gene Flow
Genetic drift is random change in allele frequencies due to finite population size, while gene flow is the movement of alleles between populations through migration; together they are the chief non-selective forces shaping genetic structure.
Definition
Genetic drift is the random fluctuation of allele frequencies between generations arising from chance sampling of gametes in a finite population. Gene flow is the transfer of alleles from one population to another through the movement of individuals or gametes.
Scope
This topic covers stochastic change in allele frequencies in finite populations, the role of effective population size, founder effects and bottlenecks, the homogenizing effect of migration between populations, and how drift and gene flow oppose selection and local adaptation.
Core questions
- How does effective population size determine the strength of genetic drift?
- What are the consequences of founder events and bottlenecks for genetic variation?
- How does gene flow homogenize populations and constrain local adaptation?
- When can drift overpower selection on weakly selected alleles?
Key theories
- Random genetic drift
- In finite populations, allele frequencies drift randomly because each generation samples a limited number of gametes; the variance of frequency change scales inversely with effective population size, eventually fixing or losing alleles.
- Nearly neutral theory
- Whether a slightly deleterious allele behaves as effectively neutral and drifts, or is removed by selection, depends on the product of its selection coefficient and the effective population size.
Mechanisms
Drift arises from binomial sampling of alleles into the next generation; its per-generation variance is proportional to p(1-p)/2N for effective population size N, so small populations drift faster. Over time drift fixes or loses alleles, reduces heterozygosity, and erodes variation. Founder effects and bottlenecks are episodes of drastically reduced N that randomly sample variation. Gene flow counteracts drift and selection by introducing migrant alleles; even a small number of migrants per generation can prevent populations from diverging by drift alone.
Clinical relevance
In conservation biology, small and fragmented populations lose genetic variation to drift and suffer inbreeding depression; managing gene flow through corridors or translocation is a core conservation tool. Founder effects also explain elevated frequencies of certain heritable disorders in isolated human populations.
History
Sewall Wright introduced the concept of random drift and effective population size in the 1930s, framing his shifting balance theory around the interplay of drift, selection, and migration. Kimura and Ohta later made drift central to molecular evolution through the neutral and nearly neutral theories.
Debates
- Relative importance of drift versus selection
- The degree to which observed genetic variation reflects neutral drift rather than selection has been contested since the neutralist-selectionist debates of the 1960s-1970s and is now addressed with genome-scale data.
Key figures
- Sewall Wright
- Motoo Kimura
- Tomoko Ohta
Related topics
Seminal works
- futuyma2017
- hartlClark2007
- ohta1973
Frequently asked questions
- Does genetic drift produce adaptation?
- No. Drift changes allele frequencies at random and does not consistently improve fit to the environment; only natural selection systematically produces adaptation.
- How much gene flow prevents populations from diverging?
- As a rough rule from theory, roughly one migrant per generation is enough to counteract divergence by drift, though the exact threshold depends on selection and population structure.