Natural selection, continued… Modes of selection… Modes of selection 1. Directional selection: selection favors higher or lower value of a character disfavored favored — Mean value of trait is shifted (if heritable) — Decreases variation Examples of directional selection Antibiotic resistance: Drosophila bristle number (lab): Modes of selection… 2. Stabilizing selection: selection against phenotypes that deviate in either direction from the optimal value for a character favored disfavored Maize oil content: disfavored Mouse behavior (lab): % oil 19% — Mean value of trait maintained — Decreases variation (if heritable) — predominant selective force for many traits 0% 0 Generations 80 1 Examples of stabilizing selection Gall size in gall flies Human birth weight Gecko body size: gain territory/mates vs. exposure to owls Eurosta solidaginis Bird predation Parasitoid wasps — Often involves 2 opposing Aristelliger praesignis directional selection forces Modes of selection… Diversifying selection 3. Diversifying (disruptive): Selection for two or more modal phenotypes and against those intermediate between them disfavored favored favored — Increases variation (if heritable) — Mean value of trait may not change Black-bellied seedcracker (Pyrenestes ostrinus) 2 Why is there still genetic variation for traits directly correlated with fitness? Frequency-dependent selection: fitness depends on phenotype frequency 1. Negative (inverse) frequency-dependent selection: rare phenotype favored Possibilities … 1. ‘Fisher’s Fundamental Theorem hypothesis’: (Recall, FFT: rate at which mean fitness of population increases is proportional to the additive genetic variance for fitness.) New, favorable mutations are constantly arising, creating genetic variation for fitness-related traits. Nonequilibrium. Scale eating cichlid (Perissodus microlepis) 2. Balance between deleterious mutations and selection: Most of the genetic variation is deleterious, but not so deleterious to be purged. 3. Diversifying selection, and/or selection favoring different traits in different times/places… Futuyma, Fig. 12.16 Negative frequency-dependent selection: e.g., Self-incompatibility alleles in plants: S locus Pollen allele must differ from ovule-parent’s genotype for fertilization Rare allele can fertilize more plants — until it becomes common — maintains/increases genetic variation Positive frequency-dependent selection: common phenotype favored, fixed Different populations may become fixed for different phenotypes Müllerian mimicry: several unpalatable species share a similar warning pattern expect increase to 1/k, where k= # alleles In some cases, there is convergence to different phenotypes in different regions, due to positive frequency-dependent selection. (gametophytic self-incompatibility) Demonstrated by transplant experiments Region: A B C D E F G 3 Selection with environmental heterogeneity 1. Spatial heterogeneity: fine scale (within population) e.g., Copper tolerance in bentgrass Bentgrass (Agrostis tenuis) Selection with environmental heterogeneity 1. Spatial heterogeneity: large scale (across species range) Need at least one functional allele at both genes to be cyanogenic. Linamarase Li Presence/absence of HCN production (cyanogenesis) 2 compounds required, controlled by 2 genes: Ac/ac: presence/absence of cyanogenic glucoside (= linamarin) White clover (Trifolium repens) Linamarin + Li __ Li __ Ac Ac __ li li ac ac Ac __ li li ac ac HCN + — — — [vacuole] Li/li: presence/absence of hydrolyzing enzyme = linamarase [cell wall] Individuals: HCN color assay: A) Leaf alone A B) Exogenous linamarin B C) Exogenous linamarase C Acli AcLi Acli acLi AcLi acli acLi AcLi 4 Cyanogenesis protects clover plants from herbivores Frequency of cyanogenesis decreases with colder temperatures Altitude AcLi acli ac Change in live weight Winter temperature li ac li Ac Li % Ac allele 6400 ft Days Dirzo and Harper 1982. Mean January temperature (F) 1900 ft Ac Li Cline: gradual change in genotype/trait over a geographical continuum Frequency of cyanogenesis and colder climate… Hypothesis 1: Cyanogenesis is disadvantageous in colder climates because freezing causes cell rupture and HCN autotoxicity. Testing freeze damage to under controlled conditions (30 genotypes, 8 replicates apiece, randomized)… Frequency of cyanogenesis and colder climate… For a sample of clover plants from across Europe, cyanogenic plants show lower freezing tolerance (18 genotypes): But: cyanogenic plants tend to come from warmer climates 5 Frequency of cyanogenesis and colder climate… Frequency of cyanogenesis and colder climate… For a sample of clover plants from polymorphic populations (12 genotypes): Hypothesis 2: If there are fewer herbivores in colder climates… then plants investing in growth rather than cyanogenesis may be at a competitive advantage. • Acyanogenic plants show Floral mass (g) greater reproductive output: AcLi No significant difference in freezing tolerance for plants that come from the same climate Polymorphism may be maintained due to resource allocation trade-offs, favored in different environments. Selection with environmental heterogeneity Heterozygote advantage (overdominance): heterozygote fitness exceeds homozygotes 2. Temporal heterogeneity —No longer expect fixation of one allele. e.g., Darwin’s finch beak size in drought vs. wet years e.g., hemoglobin β: AAAS heterozygote dry dry dry β2 β1 AS: β-chain: Glu (6) —> Val wet large, hard Seed morphology Beak depth acli (Kakes 1989) α2 α1 small, soft Sickle cell anemia (ASAS homozygote) 6 AAAS heterozygote advantage in areas of malaria: Heterozygote advantage: cystic fibrosis AS frequency is correlated with regions of Malaria CFTR protein: Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator AAAA: no anemia, susceptible to malaria AAAS: slight anemia, resistance to malaria ASAS: severe anemia and early death AAAA W: 0.89 AA AS ASAS 1.0 0.2 Plasmodium falciparum ‘Homozygote’ recessive: cystic fibrosis; susceptible to Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung infection; early death. • Loss-of-function allele frequency: ~2-5% in Europeans In Africa Heterozygotes are protected against Salmonella typhi cell infiltration in the gut: 86% fewer bacteria. Across 11 European countries, severity of typhoid outbreaks is correlated with frequency of Δ F508 in the next generation. • Δ F508 (70%), plus ~1000 other loss-of-function haplotypes identified Methods for documenting natural selection: 1. Longitudinal studies: follow a group of individuals for some or all of their lives; observe variation in phenotypes and fitness e.g., Darwin’s finches 2. Experimental manipulation (transplants, mark/re-capture, etc.); look for associations between phenotypes and fitness in different environments e.g., predation on peppered moths; Müllerian mimicry 3. Comparison among age classes. Look for shifts in phenotypes. e.g., copper tolerance in grass 4. Long-term studies of trait distributions (over many generations) e.g., Darwin’s finches Better for detecting directional selection than stabilizing 5. Environmental perturbations e.g., antibiotic resistance, pesticide resistance (But not all high-frequency disease alleles reflect heterozygote advantage) 6. Correlation between environment and phenotype e.g., cyanogenesis clines; caveat: correlation is not necessarily causation 7