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Inferring Genomic Histories of Structured Populations: Lessons from the Hominids


Type

Thesis

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Authors

Desai, Tariq 

Abstract

Demography is a major determinant of the variation of species. Understanding how it effects the genetic composition of populations allows us to infer history from genetic data. I contribute to this project in three ways. First, I estimate the historical trajectories of effective population size in Pan and Pongo. These analyses are based on past rates of coalescence, estimated within and between populations, and they use the largest known samples of whole genomes for each species. From these, I infer new histories of migration and separation in each genus.

Second, the interpretation of past rates of coalescence is known to depend on whether a population is structured. I analyse a novel model of non-equilibrium island structure and propose an approach through which it can be used to aid the interpretation of estimated historical changes in effective population size. This is based on comparisons of the effects on theoretical distributions of coalescent times. The approach is then applied to examples arising in chimpanzee and human population history, in both cases suggesting effective population size changes are more likely due to changes in census population size, rather than island structure.

The proliferation of ancient DNA sequencing presents a rich new resource. I develop a haplotype-based approach to help test more directly for ancestral structure. It is based on reconstructions of the ancestral recombination graph of a sample. The method incorporates an explicit coalescent analysis of locus ancestry under idealised demographic models. It jointly analyses samples of ancient and modern whole genomes in which modern sequences trace some recent part of their ancestry to populations from which the ancient sequences are drawn. I illustrate some of the possibilities and limitations of this tentative approach and apply it to questions about the peopling of North America.

Description

Date

2019-01-18

Advisors

Scally, Aylwyn

Keywords

Population genetics, Hominid evolution, Genome evolution

Qualification

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Awarding Institution

University of Cambridge
Sponsorship
Gates Cambridge Trust