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Can artificially selected phenotypes influence a component of field fitness? Thermal selection and fly performance under thermal extremes |
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Author: Kristensen, T. N.; Loeschcke, V.; Hoffmann,
A. A.
Year: 2007
Title: Can artificially selected phenotypes influence
a component of field fitness? Thermal selection and fly performance under
thermal extremes
Journal: Proceedings of the Royal Society
B-Biological Sciences
Volume: 274
Pages: 771-778
Date: Mar
Abstract: Artificially selected lines are widely used
to investigate the genetic basis of quantitative traits and make inferences
about evolutionary trajectories. Yet, the relevance of selected traits to field
fitness is rarely tested. Here, we assess the relevance of thermal stress
resistance artificially selected in the laboratory to one component of field
fitness by investigating the likelihood of adult Drosophila melanogaster
reaching food bait under different temperatures. Lines resistant to heat
reached the bait more often than controls under hot and cold conditions, but
less often at intermediate temperatures, suggesting a fitness cost of increased
heat resistance but not at temperature extremes. Cold-resistant lines were more
common at baits than controls under cold as well as hot field conditions, and
there was no cost at intermediate temperatures. One of the replicate
heat-resistant lines was caught less often than the others under hot
conditions. Direct and correlated patterns of responses in laboratory tests did
not fully predict the low performance of the heat selected lines at
intermediate temperatures, nor the high performance of the cold selected lines
under hot conditions. Therefore, lines selected artificially not only behaved
partly as expected based on laboratory assays but also evolved patterns only
evident in the field releases.
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