The kinship matrix: inferring the kinship structure of a population from its demography

Ecol Lett. 2021 Dec;24(12):2750-2762. doi: 10.1111/ele.13854. Epub 2021 Oct 5.

Abstract

The familial structure of a population and the relatedness of its individuals are determined by its demography. There is, however, no general method to infer kinship directly from the life cycle of a structured population. Yet, this question is central to fields such as ecology, evolution and conservation, especially in contexts where there is a strong interdependence between familial structure and population dynamics. Here, we give a general formula to compute, from any matrix population model, the expected number of arbitrary kin (sisters, nieces, cousins, etc) of a focal individual ego, structured by the class of ego and of its kin. Central to our approach are classic but little-used tools known as genealogical matrices. Our method can be used to obtain both individual-based and population-wide metrics of kinship, as we illustrate. It also makes it possible to analyse the sensitivity of the kinship structure to the traits implemented in the model.

Keywords: familial structure; kinship demography; population projection matrices; relatedness; structured populations.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Population Dynamics*