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THE SELECTIVE ADVANTAGE OF CRYPSIS IN MICE
Authors:Sacha N. Vignieri  Joanna G. Larson  Hopi E. Hoekstra
Affiliation:1. Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and The Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, 26 Oxford St, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138;2. E‐mail: svignieri@oeb.harvard.edu
Abstract:
The light color of mice that inhabit the sandy dunes of Florida's coast have served as a textbook example of adaptation for nearly a century, despite the fact that the selective advantage of crypsis has never been directly tested or quantified in nature. Using plasticine mouse models of light and dark color, we demonstrate a strong selective advantage for mice that match their local background substrate. Further our data suggest that stabilizing selection maintains color matching within a single habitat, as models that are both lighter and darker than their local environment are selected against. These results provide empirical evidence in support of the hypothesis that visual hunting predators shape color patterning in Peromyscus mice and suggest a mechanism by which selection drives the pronounced color variation among populations.
Keywords:Adaptation  camouflage  natural selection  Peromyscus  plasticine model  stabilizing selection
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