Literature DB >> 28568292

QUANTITATIVE GENETICS OF BRYOZOAN PHENOTYPIC EVOLUTION. II. ANALYSIS OF SELECTION AND RANDOM CHANGE IN FOSSIL SPECIES USING RECONSTRUCTED GENETIC PARAMETERS.

Alan H Cheetham1, Jeremy B C Jackson2, Lee-Ann C Hayek3.   

Abstract

The roles of natural selection and random genetic change in the punctuated phenotypic evolution of eight Miocene-Pliocene tropical American species of the cheilostome bryozoan Metrarabdotos are analyzed by quantitative genetic methods. Trait heritabilities and genetic covariances reconstructed by partitioning within- and among-colony phenotypic variance are similar to those previously obtained for living species of the cheilostome Stylopoma using breeding data. The hypothesis that differences in skeletal morphology between species of Metrarabdotos are entirely due to mutation and genetic drift cannot be rejected for reasonable rates of mutation maintained for periods brief enough to account for the geologically abrupt appearances of these species in the fossil record. Except for one pair of species, separated by the largest morphologic distance, directional selection acting alone would require unrealistically high rates of selective mortality to be maintained for these periods. Thus, directional selection is not strongly implicated in the divergence of Metrarabdotos species. Within species, rates of net phenotypic change are slow enough to require stabilizing selection, but mask large, relatively rapid fluctuations, all of which, however, can be attributed to chance departures from the mean phenotype by mutation and genetic drift, rather than to tracking environmental fluctuation by directional selection. The results are consistent with genetic models involving shifts between multiple adaptive peaks on which phenotypes remain more or less static through long-term stabilizing selection. Regardless of the degree to which directional selection may be involved in peak shifts, phenotypic differentiation is thus related to processes different than the pervasive stabilizing selection acting within species. © 1994 The Society for the Study of Evolution.

Keywords:  Bryozoa; Metrarabdotos; genetic drift; heritability; mutation; natural selection; phenotypic evolution; quantitative genetics; stabilizing selection

Year:  1994        PMID: 28568292     DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1994.tb01317.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Evolution        ISSN: 0014-3820            Impact factor:   3.694


  4 in total

1.  Molecular variability in the Celleporella hyalina (Bryozoa; Cheilostomata) species complex: evidence for cryptic speciation from complete mitochondrial genomes.

Authors:  Andrea Waeschenbach; Joanne S Porter; Roger N Hughes
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2012-06-20       Impact factor: 2.316

2.  How colonial animals evolve.

Authors:  Carl Simpson; Amalia Herrera-Cubilla; Jeremy B C Jackson
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2020-01-08       Impact factor: 14.136

3.  Trait-fitness associations do not predict within-species phenotypic evolution over 2 million years.

Authors:  Emanuela Di Martino; Lee Hsiang Liow
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2021-01-20       Impact factor: 5.349

4.  Paleozoic origins of cheilostome bryozoans and their parental care inferred by a new genome-skimmed phylogeny.

Authors:  Russell J S Orr; Emanuela Di Martino; Mali H Ramsfjell; Dennis P Gordon; Björn Berning; Ismael Chowdhury; Sean Craig; Robyn L Cumming; Blanca Figuerola; Wayne Florence; Jean-Georges Harmelin; Masato Hirose; Danwei Huang; Sudhanshi S Jain; Helen L Jenkins; Olga N Kotenko; Piotr Kuklinski; Hannah E Lee; Teresa Madurell; Linda McCann; Hannah L Mello; Matthias Obst; Andrew N Ostrovsky; Gustav Paulay; Joanne S Porter; Natalia N Shunatova; Abigail M Smith; Javier Souto-Derungs; Leandro M Vieira; Kjetil L Voje; Andrea Waeschenbach; Kamil Zágoršek; Rachel C M Warnock; Lee Hsiang Liow
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2022-03-30       Impact factor: 14.136

  4 in total

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