Founder Population

When a species invades a new area, especially an island, the original, small population is called a founder population. The concept of a founder population is usually used in a context of subsequent population growth, and populations that have recently arisen from small founder populations will exhibit reduced variation due to the genetic drift implied by such a population bottleneck. Founder populations are essential to the study of island biogeography. A natural tabula rasa is not easily found. Classic series of studies on founder population effects were done following the catastrophic eruption in 1883 of Krakatau, ('Krakatoa'), which erased all life on the island remnant. Another ongoing study has been following the biocolonization of Surtsey, Iceland, a new volcanic island that erupted offshore between 1963 and 1967.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
michel marc bouchard
karin boye
heorot
airtran
scott brison
libby davies
common year starting on thursday
juan goytisolo
judy grahn
giants stadium
patrick cockburn
katar (novel)
andrew cockburn
interstate & foreign landmark missionary baptists association
fiasko (novel)
leap year starting on saturday
rail tracks
independent baptist church of america
cottaging
high level assembler
leap year starting on a friday
leap year starting on thursday
energy flow
glory hole
landmark baptist church
leap year starting on wednesday
chevrolet avalanche
pigeon guillemot
dennis archer
christian unity baptist association
communist party of australia
jaap de hoop scheffer
zizhi tongjian
xenosaga
fifth jerusalem
kos mos
realian
martin gutzwiller
lake jackson
north koolaupoko, hawaii
perfect information
whoopee!
jonathan creek
chanson de geste