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The genetic covariance among clinal environments after adaptation to an environmental gradient in Drosophila serrata |
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Author: Sgro, C. M.; Blows, M. W.
Year: 2004
Title: The genetic covariance among clinal
environments after adaptation to an environmental gradient in Drosophila serrata
Journal: Genetics
Volume: 167
Pages: 1281-1291
Date: Jul
Abstract: We examined the genetic basis of clinal
adaptation by determining the evolutionary response of life-history traits to
laboratory natural selection along a gradient of thermal stress in Drosophila serrata. A gradient of heat stress was created by exposing larvae
to a heat stress of 36degrees for 4 hr for 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 days of larval
development, with the remainder of development taking place at 25degrees.
Replicated lines were exposed to each level of this stress every second
generation for 30 generations. At the end of selection, we conducted a complete
reciprocal transfer experiment where all populations were raised in all
environments, to estimate the realized additive genetic covariance matrix among
clinal environments in three life-history traits. Visualization of the genetic
covariance functions of the life-history traits revealed that the genetic
correlation between environments generally declined as environments became more
different and even became negative between the most different environments in
some cases. One exception to this general pattern was a life-history trait
representing the classic trade-off between development time and body size,
which responded to selection in a similar genetic fashion across all
environments. Adaptation to clinal environments may involve a number of
distinct genetic effects along the length of the cline, the complexity of which
may not be fully revealed by focusing primarily on populations at the ends of
the cline.
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