4.7 Article

Directional selection effects on patterns of phenotypic (co)variation in wild populations

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2016.1615

关键词

quantitative genetics; adaptive landscape; P-matrix; genotype-phenotype map; chipmunks; Tamias

资金

  1. Yosemite Conservancy
  2. National Park Service Inventory and Monitoring Program
  3. National Geographic Society [8190-07]
  4. National Science Foundation [DEB 0640859]
  5. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa de Sao Paulo (FAPESP) [2010/52369-0, 2012/00852-4, 2012/24937-9, 2011/14295-7]

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Phenotypic (co)variation is a prerequisite for evolutionary change, and understanding how (co)variation evolves is of crucial importance to the biological sciences. Theoretical models predict that under directional selection, phenotypic (co)variation should evolve in step with the underlying adaptive landscape, increasing the degree of correlation among co-selected traits as well as the amount of genetic variance in the direction of selection. Whether either of these outcomes occurs in natural populations is an open question and thus an important gap in evolutionary theory. Here, we documented changes in the phenotypic (co)variation structure in two separate natural populations in each of two chipmunk species (Tamias alpinus and T. speciosus) undergoing directional selection. In populations where selection was strongest (those of T. alpinus), we observed changes, at least for one population, in phenotypic (co)variation that matched theoretical expectations, namely an increase of both phenotypic integration and (co)variance in the direction of selection and a re-alignment of the major axis of variation with the selection gradient.

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