scholarly journals DEVELOPMENTAL RATE AND COMPETITIVE ABILITY IN TRIBOLIUM. II. CHANGES IN COMPETITIVE ABILITY FOLLOWING FURTHER SELECTION FOR DEVELOPMENTAL RATE

Evolution ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 292-298 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter S. Dawson
Evolution ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 72 (11) ◽  
pp. 2513-2536 ◽  
Author(s):  
Madeline A. E. Peters ◽  
Arthur E. Weis

2006 ◽  
Vol 35 ◽  
pp. 247-250
Author(s):  
H. Randle ◽  
E. Elworthy

The influence of Natural Selection on the evolution of the horse (Equus callabus) is minimal due to its close association with humans. Instead Artificial Selection is commonly imposed through selection for features such as a ‘breed standard’ or competitive ability. It has long been considered to be useful if indicators of characteristics such as physical ability could be identified. Kidd (1902) suggested that the hair coverings of animals were closely related to their lifestyle, whether they were active or passive. In 1973 Smith and Gong concluded that hair whorl (trichloglyph) pattern and human behaviour is linked since hair patterning is determined at the same time as the brain develops in the foetus. More recently Grandin et al. (1995), Randle (1998) and Lanier et al. (2001) linked features of facial hair whorls to behaviour and production in cattle. Hair whorl features have also been related to temperament in equines (Randle et al., 2003).


1960 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 333-350 ◽  
Author(s):  
Forbes W. Robertson

1. The growth of strains of Drosophila melanogaster selected for large size under different nutritional conditions has been recorded on a variety of different media and compared with that of the unselected population. The experiments were designed to test the inference from earlier work that selection for the same ‘character’, body size, on different diets leads to more or less different changes in growth and metabolism. The inference has been amply confirmed.2. When compared on a number of deficient synthetic diets, the strains which had been selected either on a low-protein diet or on one in which all the essential nutrients had been reduced, suffered a much smaller reduction in body size than either the unselected population or, especially, a large strain selected on the favourable live yeast medium. Some diets which drastically reduced the body size of the unselected population lead to no change in the size of strains selected on the synthetic media, although development time was prolonged. Hence selection had extended the capacity for maintaining a characteristic adult body size to diets which normally would lead to a decline. This is taken as evidence of improved adaptation to such conditions. There is also some evidence that selection on the synthetic diets had lowered the level of adaptation to the usual live yeast diet, since body size tended to be lower on this medium than on some of the normally sub-optimal diets.3. To provide comparisons in adverse conditions which are probably more closely related to those commonly encountered by populations in nature or the laboratory, the performance of the strains has been compared in a graded series of competitive conditions on the live yeast medium. By using genetically marked files of the foundation population, which were shown to react in the same way as unmarked flies—in terms of survival, body size and development time—the competitive ability of the different strains has been tested against that of unselected individuals. The latter are generally superior to the selected strains, which differ among themselves, however, in a way which can be related to the conditions in which they were selected.4. Under such competitive conditions, the strains selected on the synthetic diets suffer a much greater decline in body size than do the unselected individuals. For the strain selected on live yeast, the proportional reduction of body size is about the same for the unselected flies at lower levels of crowding, but is clearly greater under more severe conditions of competition.5. The low-protein strain has been backcrossed to the unselected stock. When reared on a variety of synthetic diets, the performance of the F1 was generally intermediate between that of the parents.6. Nutritional variation may be responsible for either a high environmental correlation between the two measures of growth, body size and duration of larval period, or no apparent correlation. Provided the diet is not too unfavourable, body size remains constant although development time may be lengthened to a variable degree. With more adverse conditions, body size is reduced and development time is lengthened more or less proportionately. Such differences in reaction probably depend on the particular stage of larval growth and development primarily affected by the treatment; this problem is being examined further. The inverse relations between body size and development time may represent the operation of a kind of safety mechanism which ensures that the adult reproductive state is attained sooner than would be so if the capacity for maintaining a characteristic body size were more effective in relation to deficient diets. Populations and species adapted to different conditions are likely to differ as to where the balance is struck between effective maintenance of a characteristic adult size, with maximum potential egg production, and the alternative response, according to their ecology. This possibility must be borne in mind when the response to selection for, say, body size is compared in different species.


2017 ◽  

ABSTRACTCo-expression of genes in plant sporophytes and gametophytes allows correlated gametic and sporophytic selection. Theory predicts that, under outcrossing, an allele conferring greater pollen competitive ability should fix within a population unless antagonistic pleiotropy with the sporophyte stage is strong. However, under strong selfing, pollen competitiveness is immaterial as superior and inferior competitors are deposited on opposite stigmas, producing assortative competition. Because many plant species have mixed-mating systems, selfing should be critical in the spread and maintenance of pollen-expressed genes affecting competitiveness. We present two one-locus, two-allele population genetic models for the evolution of a locus controlling pleiotropic antagonism between pollen competitiveness and diploid fitness. Analytical solutions provide minimum and maximum selfing rates allowing invasion of alleles with greater diploid and haploid fitness respectively. Further, polymorphism is only maintained when diploid selection is recessive. Fixation of the allele conferring greater pollen competitiveness may be prevented, even with weak sporophytic counter-selection, with sufficiently high selfing. Finally, selfing expands and limits the range of haploid-diploid selection coefficients allowing polymorphism, depending on dominance and selfing mode.


1966 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-218 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. D. H. Latter

This paper is concerned with three related aspects of the behaviour of populations under artificial selection for increased scutellar bristle number: (i) the pattern of response on the probit scale; (ii) the homeostatic behaviour of the selection lines on relaxation of artificial selection; and (iii) correlated responses in generation interval, reproductive capacity and competitive ability. The study was designed so that linkage would be a comparatively unimportant factor in promoting correlated responses to selection, and the effects of genetic sampling from generation to generation were also reduced to a low level.Progress from the base mean of 4·05 bristles in females to a level of almost 8 bristles has been shown to involve two distinct phases with realized heritabilities of 0·34 and 0·10 respectively, the zone of transition corresponding closely to the position of the 6/7 threshold on the underlying scale. In addition to an apparent average reduction of about 25% in the additive genetic standard deviation in phase II by comparison with phase I, the loss in response due to the opposition of natural selection has been shown to reach a maximum near the zone of separation of the two phases.The pattern of behaviour of the populations under artificial and natural selection has suggested the presence in the base population of genes of large effect on both bristle number and reproductive fitness. There is also evidence of additional genetic variation in bristle number which is effectively neutral with respect to fitness. Continued selection for increased scutellar bristle number in large populations has been shown to reduce mean competitive ability by more than 80%.


2019 ◽  
Vol 59 (5) ◽  
pp. 1303-1311 ◽  
Author(s):  
D M O’Brien

Abstract The canines of saber-toothed cats are a classic example of an extreme morphology, yet important questions pertaining to their evolution remain unanswered. Recent analyses suggest these structures functioned as tools of intrasexual combat where trait size acts as both a weapon of battle and signal of competitive ability. However, classic skeletal reconstructions suggest saber-tooth canines evolved as specialized hunting tools. Either scenario could have led to the evolution of extreme canine size and distinguishing between these hypotheses is therefore difficult. This is made more challenging by the fact that natural observation of saber-toothed cats is impossible, and biologists must rely on measures of static morphology to study the patterns of selection that favored extreme canine size. Here I analyze the static intraspecific scaling relationship between canine size and body size in the saber-toothed cat, Smilodon fatalis, to determine whether or not extreme canine size functioned as a sexually selected signal. I review the literature surrounding the evolution of sexually selected signals and the methods recently established by O’Brien et al. (2018), show how static scaling relationships can be useful, reliable tools for inferring patterns of selection, especially in fossil organisms, and provide evidence that extreme canine size in saber-toothed cats was not the product of selection for effective sexual signals, but instead evolved as either a pure intrasexually selected weapon or a hunting tool.


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