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Time scale matters: genetic analysis does not support adaptation‐by‐time as the mechanism for adaptive seasonal declines in kokanee reproductive life span
Authors:Yolanda E Morbey  Evelyn L Jensen  Michael A Russello
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada;2. Department of Biology, University of British Columbia, Okanagan Campus, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada
Abstract:Seasonal declines of fitness‐related traits are often attributed to environmental effects or individual‐level decisions about reproductive timing and effort, but genetic variation may also play a role. In populations of Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.), seasonal declines in reproductive life span have been attributed to adaptation‐by‐time, in which divergent selection for different traits occurs among reproductively isolated temporal components of a population. We evaluated this hypothesis in kokanee (freshwater obligate Oncorhynchus nerka) by testing for temporal genetic structure in neutral and circadian‐linked loci. We detected no genetic differences in presumably neutral loci among kokanee with different arrival and maturation dates within a spawning season. Similarly, we detected no temporal genetic structure in OtsClock1b, Omy1009uw, or OmyFbxw11, candidate loci associated with circadian function. The genetic evidence from this study and others indicates a lack of support for adaptation‐by‐time as an important evolutionary mechanism underlying seasonal declines in reproductive life span and a need for greater consideration of other mechanisms such as time‐dependent, adaptive adjustment of reproductive effort.
Keywords:Adaptation‐by‐time  evolutionary mechanisms  isolation‐by‐time  reproductive timing  seasonal declines in fitness‐related traits
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