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LT10 Evolution of Quantitative Characters

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Evolution of Quantitative Characters

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  • April 9, 2016
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  • 2014/2015
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Evolution of Quantitative Characters

How does selection act on quantitative traits?

Three modes of selection

Directional Selection

 Fitness profile – one tip of the character distribution is at an
advantage
- Fitness profile – Fitness (y) against character value (x)
 Consequences for trait’s frequency distribution = shift in mean
value
 Imagine a population undergoes a directional selection for high
trait values
- Blue spots show chosen parents and their progeny
1. Slope of line estimates heritability
2. Difference between mean of selected
parents and population mean = S, selection
differential
3. Difference between mean of progeny and
population mean = R, response to selection

Heritability and Regression

If we regress mean offspring on mid-parent values –
why is the gradient an estimate of heritability of
the trait?

Statistics: Regression of a variable y on variable x = covariance x and y/ variance of x

Quantitative genetics: covariance of offspring and mid-parent value = ½ V A, variance of
mid-parent values = ½ VP




1. S is same value as previously
2. Slope of regression is shallower
3. Response to selection is smaller
 Breeder’s equation: R = h2S
 Can estimate h2 from selection experiment: impose directional selection of known
strength (so S value known), measure the response to selection (R value estimated)
then h2 = R/S

Artificial Selection (form of directional selection)

, Selecting for specific phenotypes can lead to large phenotypic differences from
wild-type
Eg. domesticated breeds of pigeon all stem from wild rock pigeon by selective
breeding – fantail: 32 tail feathers vs, 12 of mere ancestor
 Direct and correlated responses
- Direct response: change in the trait under selection
- Indirect or correlated responses, changes in other traits
Eg. sexual selection
Context is female preference for male ornamental traits – AS can reveal
correlations between genes for female preference and genes for male
ornaments

Does artificial selection on male ornament cause a correlated response in female
preference?

 3 selection regimes maintained >13 generations, 2 replicates per selection regime
 AS on allometric shape of male flies
 Long eyespan relative to body size – measure 50 males, choose 10 with longest ES to
be parents
 Short eyespan relative to body size – measure 50 males choose 10 with shortest ES
to be parents
 Control (unselected – 10 males chosen at
random from 50)
 There was a direct response to selection:
Relative ES increased in the long lines and
decreased in the short lines
 Is there a correlated response to selection, ie.
is there a change to female preference when
male traits are selected?
- Used choice chambers
- There is a correlated response in preference – unselected
control females showed strong preference for L males
- Females from L lines also preferred L males
- C and L females had similar preference level
- BUT S line females perferred S males – complete reversal
of the usual preference observed in field and laboratory
populations




Directional selection in the field

 May be quite common especially in changeable environments
Eg. Selection on bill size in Darwin finch

,  In past 3 000 000 years, adaptive radiation of feeding specialisation – cactus
flowers, use twig tools for insects from bark, eggs, leaves, blood, ticks
 Key studies on Medium Ground Finch, Geospiza fortis
- Simple island ecology: identify all seed types in finch diet – use bill to crack open
seeds
- Variation in bill thickness some individuals more efficient at digesting hard
seeds
 1977 severe drought – drought resistant plants have larger seeds = imposed
directional selection on beak traits in finches
 Birds with deeper and stronger beaks could crack
seeds better, smaller died of starvation
 Beak traits have heritability of ~0.7
 Net effect of selection was an increase in average
beak depth of survivors relative to original
population
- Pattern of directional selection changes
depending on climate changes
- Change due to selection, the S values for
several traits in 1977 + 1982 (drought), 1985
(very wet)
- Direction of S can be reversed
- Suite of traits changed synchronously, all positive or all negative
- Traits move in concert – directional selection can retain genetic variation
(though the AVERAGE bill depth of survivors relative to original population
changed)

Directional selection (naturally occurring) – is often not long sustained in one direction,
with reversals in sign from time to time

- In the long term, fluctuating directional selection may maintain genetic
variability in traits since different character optima exist at different times
- Alleles that increase and alleles that decrease a trait value will have bouts of
favourable selection and can persist




Stabilising Selection

 Fitness profile – fitness peak at intermediate values of trait with selection against
the extremes

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