Mars Independence 2/12: Genetic Diversity
The Real Minimum Viable Population Math
Everyone has heard the old numbers thrown around:
“160 minimum” … “500 to be safe” … “a million for a real civilization.”
Most of those figures come from 20th-century conservation biology applied to pandas and cattle - not 21st-century humans with genome sequencers in their pockets.
Here is the actual 2025-2035 math, using only technologies that are routine clinical practice today:
Modern humans carry surprisingly little dangerous recessive baggage
Large genomic databases (gnomAD, UK Biobank, deCODE Iceland) show the average person carries only ~1-2 severe recessive lethal equivalents. Inbreeding depression is real, but slow and far milder than the old models predicted.Whole-genome sequencing + intelligent partner matching collapses the risk
Pre-flight sequencing (already ordered by millions on Earth in 2025) combined with simple, open-source matching algorithms virtually eliminates the chance of two carriers of the same severe mutation having children together.
Peer-reviewed models for multi-generational space settlements (2020-2024) conclude:
80–150 carefully selected, unrelated adults, actively matched for reproduction, maintain genetic health indefinitely with zero further intervention.
- Earth already runs the experiment for us
- Iceland: effective founder population <10 000 → healthy today
- Finland, French Canadians, Ashkenazi Jews, Amish - all started from far fewer than 500 effective founders and remain viable with modern screening.
A planned 2035 Mars colony begins with more genetic diversity and better tools than any of those populations ever had.
Bottom line – no embryos, no million-person fleet, no speculation required. The real minimum viable population for a permanently healthy Martian civilization is 80–150 rigorously screened adults plus a laptop running matching software.
That is it.
Everything above that number is logistics, not genetics.
Quote or reply: knowing the genetic math is solved at ~100 people, what is the smallest founding crew YOU would personally launch with?
I read every answer.
Next 3/12: Pioneering losses – why the first crew can be tiny and still survive.