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Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences | 1977

Heterogeneous heterozygosities in Mus musculus populations

R. J. Berry; Josephine Peters

Both chance and adaptation have effects in determining the genetical constitution of local populations of any organism, but opinions differ widely over their relative importance. This study describes the frequencies of electrophoretically detected alleles at 22 loci in 1538 house mice (Mus musculus L.) from 27 population samples collected from the Faroe, Shetland and Orkney archipelagoes; the mainland of Great Britain plus three small off-shore islands; and a sub-Antarctic island (Macquarie) lying between Australia and the Antarctic Continent. Neither the average heterozygosities nor the distribution of allele frequencies in the different populations showed any discernible pattern, but at least three loci (Hbb, Es-2, Dip-1) underwent seasonal changes in frequency which could only be due to selection. Moreover the overall variances of allele frequencies were significantly heterogeneous (P ≈ 0.001), suggesting that different factors affect different loci. The key to understanding this apparent randomness of frequencies is recognizing that selection pressures are non-constant, and particular traits may affect fitness only spasmodically. The occurrence and frequency of an allele in any population may reflect only chance historical factors, but the trait(s) affected by it is potentially subject to selection at any time. For example, the proportion of heterozygotes at the Hbb locus in one population (Skokholm) living entirely independent of man, increased in five summers out of six. Winter death in mice is colddependent, and the exceptional summer followed a particularly mild winter when the usual decrease in heterozygotes did not take place. An r-selected species like the house mouse is more likely to reveal the interplay of genetical chance and purpose than a numerically less volatile one in which short-term genetical adjustment will be relatively uncommon.


Journal of Zoology | 2009

Sub-antarctic House mice: colonization, survival and selection

R. J. Berry; Josephine Peters; R. J. van Aarde


Journal of Zoology | 2009

The House mice of the Faroe Islands: a study in microdifferentiation

R. J. Berry; M. E. Jakobson; Josephine Peters


Journal of Zoology | 2009

Vagility in an island population of the House mouse

R. J. Berry; M. E. Jakobson


Journal of Zoology | 2009

Ecological Genetics of an Island Population of the House Mouse (Mus Musculus)

R. J. Berry; M. E. Jakobson


Journal of Zoology | 2009

Competition and extinction: the mice of Foula, with notes on those of Fair Isle and St Kilda

R. J. Berry; B. J. K. Tricker


Journal of Zoology | 2010

History in the evolution of Apodemus sylvaticus (Mammalia) at one edge of its range

R. J. Berry


Journal of Zoology | 2009

Macquarie Island House mice: A genetical isolate on a sub‐Antarctic island

R. J. Berry; Josephine Peters


Journal of Zoology | 2009

Visible variation in the dog‐whelk, Nucella lapillus

R. J. Berry; J. H. Crothers


Journal of Zoology | 2009

Stabilizing selection in the dog‐whelk (Nucella lapillus)

R. J. Berry; J. H. Crothers

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I. M. Evans

University of Leicester

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R. J. van Aarde

Mammal Research Institute

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