Small Population Size

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Small population size - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Small population size. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to: ... Populations with small population size behave differently to larger populations. ...
en.wikipedia.org

Small Population Size Effects: Genetic Drift
Describes the phenomenon acting on small, reproductively isolated populations that can produce rapid changes in gene frequencies totally independent of mutation, ...
anthro.palomar.edu

PEOD6/PD006: Determining Sample Size
If the population is small then the sample size can be reduced slightly. ... size provides proportionately more information for a small population than ...
edis.ifas.ufl.edu

SmallPop
... per generation, and as such would be totally insignificant in a small population. ... Unequal sex ratios will directly affect the Effective Population Size (Ne) ...
faculty.plattsburgh.edu

Washington State Department of Health - Assessment Guidelines: Small ...
Working with small numbers in data for health assessment ... when there are small denominators (population size represented in a specific ...
www.doh.wa.gov

Population Size and Genetic Drift
Genetic drift: the effect of population size alone on allele and genotype frequencies ... V. The "founder effect": the result of the small size of founder population ...
www.nyu.edu

Density Dependence
... that small population sizes lead to population increases. ... equilibrium, in that small deviations in population size from K* are eliminated through time. ...
fisher.forestry.uga.edu




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The small population size of some species has various harmful consequences for their survival.

Demographic effects The influence of stochastic (random) variation in demographic (reproductive and mortality) rates is much higher for small populations than large ones. Stochastic variation in demographic rates causes small populations to fluctuate randomly in size. The smaller the population the greater the probability that fluctuations will lead to extinction. They are subject to a higher chance of extinction because they are more vulnerable to genetic drift, resulting in stochastic variation in their gene pool, their demography and their natural environment.

One demographic consequence of a small population size, the probability that all offspring in a generation are of the same sex, is easy to calculate: it is given by 1/2^{n-1} (The chance of all animals being females is 1/2^n; the same holds for all males, thus this result). This can be a problem in very small populations. In 1977, the last 18 Kakapo on a Fiordland island in New Zealand were all male, though the probability of this was only 0.0000076. With a population of just 3 individuals the probability of them all being the same sex is 0.25. Put another way, for every 4 species reduced to 3 individuals (or more precisely 3 individuals in the effective population), one will go extinct within one generation just because they are all the same sex. If the population remains at this size for several generations, such an event becomes almost inevitable.

Environmental effects Stochastic variation in the environment (year to year variation in rainfall, temperature) can produce temporally correlated birth and death rates (i.e. 'good' years when birth rates are high and death rates are low and 'bad' years when birth rates are low and death rates are high) that lead to fluctuations in the population size. Again, smaller populations are more likely to go extinct due to these environmentally generated population fluctuations than are large populations.

Genetic consequences Conservationists are often worried about a loss of genetic variation in small populations. There are two types of genetic variation that are important when dealing with small populations.





There are two mechanisms operating in small populations that influence these two types of genetic variation.





There are two types of consequence of loss of genetic variation in small populations:





The effective population size is commonly lower than the actual population size..

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