Natural selection, evolvability and bias due to environmental covariance in the field in an annual plant |
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Authors: | Winn A A |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA. winn@bio.fsu.edu |
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Abstract: | Estimates of the form and magnitude of natural selection based on phenotypic relationships between traits and fitness measures can be biased when environmental factors influence both relative fitness and phenotypic trait values. I quantified genetic variances and covariances, and estimated linear and quadratic selection coefficients, for seven traits of an annual plant grown in the field. For replicates of 50 paternal half-sib families, coefficients of selection were calculated both for individual phenotypic values of the traits and for half-sib family mean values. The potential for evolutionary response was supported by significant heritability and phenotypic directional selection for several traits but contradicted by the absence of significant genetic variation for fitness estimates and evidence of bias in phenotypic selection coefficients due to environmental covariance for at least two of the traits analysed. Only studies of a much wider range of organisms and traits will reveal the frequency and extent of such bias. |
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Keywords: | emergence time environmental covariance leaf morphology phenotypic selection selection on family mean |
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