Battling Resistance ■ 225
of the members of this rebounded population
are incredibly similar genetically, because of the
limited variety of alleles present in the original
six individuals. In an effort to restore gene flow
to the population, in 1995 researchers released
eight female Texas cougars, close genetic cousins
to the Florida panthers, into the panthers’ habi-
tat. Five of those females produced eight litters
of kittens—more genetically diverse, stronger,
and longer-lived than their fathers.
The founder effect occurs when a small
group of individuals establishes a new population
isolated from its original, larger population. For
example, in South Africa a population of people
called Afrikaners descended primarily from a
few Dutch colonists (Figure 12.16). Today, the
Afrikaner population has an unusually high
frequency of the allele that causes Huntington
disease because those original colonists by chance
carried the allele when they settled in the area.
After Vancomycin
When the initial case of VRSA popped up back
in 2002, the patient’s foot was carefully treated
with an old topical drug that is rarely used
today. The only other options were one or two
the founder effect. A genetic bottleneck is a
drop in the size of a population, for at least one
generation, that causes a loss of genetic varia-
tion (Figure 12.14). A genetic bottleneck can
threaten the survival of a population.
In the 1970s, for example, the population of the
endangered Florida panther plummeted because
of hunting and habitat destruction. The species
barely escaped extinction. At one point, experts
believed that only six wild individuals in the whole
species were still alive. This rapid population
reduction created a genetic bottleneck in which
an estimated half of the genetic variation within
the species was lost, and severe inbreeding among
the individuals that were left resulted in mala-
dies including low sperm counts and abnormally
shaped sperm in male panthers (Figure 12.15).
Thankfully, panther numbers have increased
to about 80–100 individuals in recent years, in
part because of captive breeding programs. Most
Normal panther sperm
Abnormal panther sperm
Figure 12.15
Abnormally shaped sperm in the rare
Florida panther
Florida panthers have more abnormal sperm than
do panthers from other populations—a possible
effect of a genetic bottleneck promoting the
increase of harmful alleles in the Florida panther
population.
Figure 12.16
Early Dutch colonists in South Africa