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Evolution of additive and nonadditive genetic variance in development time along a cline in Drosophila serrata |
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Author: Sgro, C. M.; Blows, M. W.
Year: 2003
Title: Evolution of additive and nonadditive genetic
variance in development time along a cline in Drosophila serrata
Journal: Evolution
Volume: 57
Pages: 1846-1851
Date: Aug
Abstract: Latitudinal clines provide natural systems
that may allow the effect of natural selection on the genetic variance to be
determined. Ten clinal populations of Drosophila
serrata collected from the eastern
coast of Australia
were used to examine clinal patterns in the trait mean and genetic variance of
the life-history trait egg-to-adult development time. Development time
significantly lengthened from tropical areas to temperate areas. The additive
genetic variance for development time in each population was not associated
with latitude but was associated with the population mean development time.
Additive genetic variance tended to be larger in populations with more extreme
development times and appeared to be consistent with allele frequency change.
In contrast, the nonadditive genetic variance was not associated with the
population mean but was associated with latitude. Levels of nonadditive genetic
variance were greatest in the region of the cline where the gradient in the
change in mean was greatest, consistent with Barton's (1999) conjecture that the
generation of linkage disequilibrium may become an important component of the
genetic variance in systems with a spatially varying optimum.
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