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. 2019 Feb 11;15(2):e1007936. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1007936

Fig 8. Dispersal promotes soft sweep detection in small subranges.

Fig 8

(a)–(c) Probability of observing a hard sweep in j samples randomly chosen from contiguous subranges of different sizes Ls in simulated 1D ranges of size L = 106, with rescaled mutation rate u˜=10-6. At the same mutation rate, broader dispersal kernels lead to a larger average clone size (〈X〉 ≈ 980, 1.6 × 104, 4 × 104 for μ = {4, 1, 0.6} respectively), which reduces the total number of alleles and favours hard sweep signatures when the sampling is done over the entire range [L = Ls, (a)]. However, when Ls is reduced [(b)–(c)], the detection of soft sweeps become increasingly likely for the broader dispersal kernels; the broken-up structure of clones compensates for their smaller overall number. For small enough subranges, the order of values of Phard(j) with increasing μ is inverted compared to the values at Ls = L.