Genetic variation is determined by the joint action of natural selection and genetic drift (chance). In small populations, selection is less effective, and the relative importance of genetic drift is higher because deleterious alleles can become more frequent and 'fixed' in a population due to chance. The allele selected for by natural selection becomes fixed more quickly, resulting in the loss of the other allele at that locus (in the case of a two allele locus) and an overall loss of genetic diversity.[5][6][7] Alternatively, larger populations are affected less by genetic drift because drift is measured using the equation 1/2N, with "N" referring to population size; it takes longer for alleles to become fixed because "N" is higher. One example of large populations showing greater adaptive evolutionary ability is the red flour beetle. Selection acting on the body color of the red flour beetle was found to be more consistent in large than in small populations; although the black allele was selected against, one of the small populations observed became homozygous for the deleterious black allele (this did not occur in the large populations).[8] for Any allele—deleterious, beneficial, or neutral—is more likely to be lost from a small population (gene pool) than a large one. This results in a reduction in the number of forms of alleles in a small population, especially in extreme cases such as monomorphism, where there is only one form of the allele. Continued fixation of deleterious alleles in small populations is called Muller's ratchet, and can lead to mutational meltdown. — Wiki
Srap Tasmaner mentioned that languages evolve, but I find I'm still not getting how that could be taken literally. — frank
If it's the same process, then we would have to say that natural selection isn't too significant in language evolution (due to low population size). — frank
To your specific point: I think you're matching things up wrong. A language is a species, not an individual organism. The counterpoint to an individual organism would be an idiolect, and maybe even a snapshot of an idiolect. In either case, you're not talking about small populations at all. — Srap Tasmaner
Evolution connotes some kind of progression towards a goal — TheMadFool
- adapting to the pressures of the language environment. — TheMadFool
It's not clear to me that there is a similar story to tell about linguistic evolution. Reproduction in language, like talk -- because it is just talk -- is cheap. Almost preposterously cheap. — Srap Tasmaner
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