Motivated by present activities in (statistical) physics directed towards
biological evolution, we review the interplay of three evolutionary forces:
mutation, selection, and genetic drift. The review addresses itself to
physicists and intends to bridge the gap between the biological and the
physical literature. We first clarify the terminology and recapitulate the
basic models of population genetics, which describe the evolution of the
composition of a population under the joint action of the various evolutionary
forces. Building on these foundations, we specify the ingredients explicitly,
namely, the various mutation models and fitness landscapes. We then review
recent developments concerning models of mutational degradation. These predict
upper limits for the mutation rate above which mutation can no longer be
controlled by selection, the most important phenomena being error thresholds,
Muller's ratchet, and mutational meltdowns. Error thresholds are deterministic
phenomena, whereas Muller's ratchet requires the stochastic component brought
about by finite population size. Mutational meltdowns additionally rely on an
explicit model of population dynamics, and describe the extinction of
populations. Special emphasis is put on the mutual relationship between these
phenomena. Finally, a few connections with the process of molecular evolution
are established.Comment: 62 pages, 6 figures, many reference