Cultural transmission of reproductive success impacts genomic diversity, coalescent tree topologies, and demographic inferences

Author:

Guez Jérémy12,Achaz Guillaume13,Bienvenu François4,Cury Jean5,Toupance Bruno1,Heyer Évelyne1,Jay Flora2,Austerlitz Frédéric1

Affiliation:

1. UMR 7206 Eco-Anthropologie, CNRS, MNHN, Université Paris Cité , Paris 75116 , France

2. Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire des Sciences du Numérique, CNRS, INRIA, Université Paris-Saclay , Orsay 91400 , France

3. SMILE Group, CNRS UMR 7241, INSERM U 1050, Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Biology (CIRB), Collège de France , Paris 75005 , France

4. Institute for Theoretical Studies, ETH Zürich , Zürich 8092 , Switzerland

5. SEED, U1284, INSERM, Université Paris Cité , Paris 75004 , France

Abstract

AbstractCultural transmission of reproductive success has been observed in many human populations as well as other animals. Cultural transmission of reproductive success consists of a positive correlation of nongenetic origin between the progeny size of parents and children. This correlation can result from various factors, such as the social influence of parents on their children, the increase of children’s survival through allocare from uncles and aunts, or the transmission of resources. Here, we study the evolution of genomic diversity over time under cultural transmission of reproductive success. Cultural transmission of reproductive success has a threefold impact on population genetics: (1) the effective population size decreases when cultural transmission of reproductive success starts, mimicking a population contraction, and increases back to its original value when cultural transmission of reproductive success stops; (2) coalescent tree topologies are distorted under cultural transmission of reproductive success, with higher imbalance and a higher number of polytomies; and (3) branch lengths are reduced nonhomogenously, with a higher impact on older branches. Under long-lasting cultural transmission of reproductive success, the effective population size stabilizes but the distortion of tree topology and the nonhomogenous branch length reduction remain, yielding U-shaped site frequency spectra under a constant population size. We show that this yields a bias in site frequency spectra-based demographic inference. Considering that cultural transmission of reproductive success was detected in numerous human and animal populations worldwide, one should be cautious because inferring population past histories from genomic data can be biased by this cultural process.

Funder

CNRS

Dr. Max Rössler, the Walter Haefner Foundation, and the ETH Zürich Foundation

Human Frontier Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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