Microevolutionary change in wild stickleback: Using integrative time- series data to infer responses to selection
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Strickland, Kasha; Matthews, Blake; Phillips, Joseph S.; Jonsson, Zophonias O.; Einarsson, Arni; Kristjansson, Bjarni K.; Rasanen, Katja
署名单位:
University of Edinburgh; Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science & Technology (EAWAG); University of Iceland; Creighton University; Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science & Technology (EAWAG); University of Jyvaskyla
刊物名称:
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
ISSN/ISSBN:
0027-12557
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2410324121
发表日期:
2024-09-10
关键词:
wright-fisher model
threespine stickleback
overlapping generations
fluctuating selection
phenotypic selection
genetic-variation
EVOLUTION
fitness
adaptation
divergence
摘要:
A central goal in evolutionary biology is to understand how different evolutionary processes cause trait change in wild populations. However, quantifying evolutionary change in the wild requires linking trait change to shifts in allele frequencies at causal loci. Nevertheless, datasets that allow for such tests are extremely rare and existing theoretical approaches poorly account for the evolutionary dynamics that likely occur in ecological settings. Using a decade- long integrative phenome-to- genome time- series dataset on wild threespine stickleback ( Gasterosteus aculeatus), we identified how different modes of selection (directional, episodic, and balancing) drive microevolutionary change in correlated traits over time. Most strikingly, we show that feeding traits changed by as much 25% across 10 generations which was driven by changes in the genetic architecture (i.e., in both genomic breeding values and allele frequencies at genetic loci for feeding traits). Importantly, allele frequencies at genetic loci related to feeding traits changed at a rate greater than expected under drift, suggesting that the observed change was a result of directional selection. Allele frequency dynamics of loci related to swimming traits appeared to be under fluctuating selection evident in periodic population crashes in this system. Our results show that microevolutionary change in a wild population is characterized by different modes of selection acting simultaneously on different traits, which likely has important consequences for the evolution of correlated traits. Our study provides one of the most thorough descriptions to date of how microevolutionary processes result in trait change in a natural population.