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The relative role of drift and selection in life-history evolution: a case study from recently founded populations of grayling Mikko Koskinen, Thrond Haugen & Craig Primmer Outline • Background to ‘Darwinian’ vs ‘neutral’ evolutionary theories • Presentation of the framework of this study • Results and conclusions Natural Selection vs Random Drift? • Transplantation experiments suggest that selection is an efficient evolutionary force - Anolis lizards were introduced onto small islands - Populations differentiated from each other over 10-14 years according to the recipient island’s vegetation (Losos et al. 1997, Nature) Natural Selection vs Random Drift? • Comparisons of phenotypic differentiation and selectively neutral differentiation (e.g. from non-coding DNA microsatellites) suggest that selection is an efficient evolutionary force 1 QS - Mean quantitative genetic (QST) differentiation generally exceeded neutral marker gene (FST) differentiation 0.1 T (Merilä & Crnokrak 2001, J. Evol. Biol.) 0.01 0.01 0.1 FST 1 Natural Selection vs Random Drift? S. Wright • In stark contrast with the Darwinian view, influential theories (e.g. Wright 1931, Kimura 1995) suggest that drift is the dominant evolutionary force in finite populations • It is fair to say that the ‘neutral drift hypothesis’ has been among the most controversial issues in evolutionary biology in the last 50 years, and is empirically understudied Outline • Background to ‘Darwinian’ vs ‘neutral’ evolutionary theories • Presentation of the framework of this study • Results and conclusions Study system European grayling, Thymallus thymallus Norway The ‘plan’ • To measure quantitative genetic differences (QST) between the populations using ‘common-garden’ experiments (six early life-history traits) • Three temperatures, three populations with half-sib design • Four unique females mated with each male (28 families per population) 2 GB QST 2 2 GB 2 GW (Spitze et al 1993, Genetics) Variance components from mixed-model Anova 95% CI from non-parametric bootstrapping • To measure neutral genetic differences (FST), i.e. the effect of drift, using 17 microsatellite DNA loci The ‘plan’ • To investigate the demographic history of the populations using microsatellites, and to use that for interpreting how the results relate to the ‘Darwinian’ vs ‘neutral’ evolutionary theories • To test the null-hypothesis of neutral evolution of the six traits using: F1, 2 N e GB 2 2 h GW t (Lande 1976, Evolution) -Ne = effective population size (maximum-likelihood estimate from microsatellite data) -2GB = additive genetic variance between populations -2GW = additive genetic variance within populations (among sire var comp) -h2 = narrow-sense heritability in a given population and environment -t = divergence time of populations Outline • Background to ‘Darwinian’ vs ‘neutral’ evolutionary theories • Presentation of the framework of this study • Results and conclusions Results - neutrality tests • Neutral evolution was rejected for the majority of the trait • Recall: F1, 2 N e GB 2 2 h GW t Trait F P length at termination 384 <0.0001 yolk-sac volume 647 <0.0001 growth rate 111 <0.0001 incubation time 17.4 <0.0001 swim-up length 2.50 0.1235 hatching length 0.70 0.5472 Results - neutrality tests • Extremely low Ne estimates, not compatible with sexual reproduction, would have been required for drift to dominate over selection F1, = 3.84 for P 0.05 Trait F P Ne(sign) length at termination 384 <0.0001 0.25 yolk-sac volume 647 <0.0001 0.14 growth rate 111 <0.0001 0.84 incubation time 17.4 <0.0001 5.33 swim-up length 2.50 ns 37.1 hatching length 0.70 ns 218 Results - QST vs FST • Population differences based on quantitative traits (QST) often strikingly exceeded the analogous measures based on microsatellites (FST) Les vs Ht FST length at termination yolk-sac volume growth rate incubation time swim-up length hatching length 0.0 0.5 1.0 Results - demographic history • Effective sizes of the populations were small • Microsatellite diversity within populations was low • The populations have historically experienced severe ‘bottlenecks’ Population n Ne (95% CI) A (SD) N0 / N1 (95% CI) Les 52 88.9 1.9 (1.1) 0.003 (0.0003-0.03) Ht 48 24.2 (12.1-42.2) 1.5 (0.9) 0.006 (0.0003-0.05) ØM 49 85.0 (36.0-170.5) 1.7 (0.9) 0.0006 (0.00008-0.01) Aur 28 55.4 (24.8-110.0) 1.6 (0.9) 0.001 (0.0003-0.005) Show examples of Ne sampling distributions and likewise for N0/N1 Conclusions • The evolution of the phenotypic differences between the populations was dominantly due to natural selection -neutrality tests [F-test and Ne(sign) estimates] -QST vs FST comparisons • Provide Fst/Qst+Fst Conclusions • However, also drift had a notable effect (FST = 0.05-0.21) • The dominating effect of selection is interesting in the light of the demographic history of the populations. • According to the influential ‘neutral theory’, the low Nes and bottlenecks should have emphasized the effect of drift Acknowledgements • Thanks to Juha Merilä, Mark Beaumont, Asbjørn Vøllestad, Peter Crnokrak, Andrew Hendry, Martin Lascoux and Nick Smith for helpful comments!