Evolutionary trade-offs in a small mammal : a quantitative genetics approach
Limited resources force individuals to trade-off between life-history traits. A
vast diversity of life-history strategies, which optimally combine life history
traits, can be found. Knowledge of the genetic basis of this phenotypic variation
is key to understanding evolutionary processes. I approached life-history
evolution by estimating quantitative genetic parameters for a set of life-history
traits in the bank vole (Myodes glareolus). The work is based on a laboratory-kept
colony subjected to two-way selection for litter size (High- (H) and Low- (L)
lines). Costs of the created reproductive strategies were observed in natural
conditions. Selection increased the difference in litter size between lines, even
though the response was asymmetric. The difference persisted in outdoor
enclosures. A life-history trade-off between offspring number and offspring size
was explained by environmental correlations as associated genetic correlations
were even positive. Lines did not diverge in offspring size. In the enclosures
maternal body mass had greater effect on pup survival in the L-line. Litter and
maternal environment explained most of the phenotypic variation in pup body
mass during the nursing period, while direct genetic variation emerged later,
implicating selection on early size in the bank vole. Male and female metabolic
rate did not seem to share genetic background; the first lacking additive genetic
variation and the latter being bound to fecundity by genetic correlation close to
one. Testosterone, a principle determinant of male reproductive success in the
bank vole, was contrasted with humoral immune system in the both sexes. In
general, with the exception of metabolism, the estimated genetic parameters did
not set absolute constraints for life-history evolution. However, dimensionality
of the additive genetic co(variance) matrix constrains evolution to act along
certain trait combinations. In the future, research should strive to find genetic
mechanisms, which, through the endocrine system, produces phenotypic
co(variation) in different life-history traits.
...
Publisher
University of JyväskyläISBN
978-951-39-7113-7ISSN Search the Publication Forum
1456-9701Keywords
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