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The effects of stress and sex on selection, genetic covariance, and the evolutionary response

Holman, Luke; Jacomb, F.

Authors

F. Jacomb



Abstract

The capacity of a population to adapt to selection (evolvability) depends on whether the structure of genetic variation permits the evolution of fitter trait combinations. Selection, genetic variance and genetic covariance can change under environmental stress, and males and females are not genetically independent, yet the combined effects of stress and dioecy on evolvability are not well understood. Here, we estimate selection, genetic (co)variance and evolvability in both sexes of Tribolium castaneum flour beetles under stressful and benign conditions, using a half‐sib breeding design. Although stress uncovered substantial latent heritability, stress also affected genetic covariance, such that evolvability remained low under stress. Sexual selection on males and natural selection on females favoured a similar phenotype, and there was positive intersex genetic covariance. Consequently, sexual selection on males augmented adaptation in females, and intralocus sexual conflict was weak or absent. This study highlights that increased heritability does not necessarily increase evolvability, suggests that selection can deplete genetic variance for multivariate trait combinations with strong effects on fitness, and tests the recent hypothesis that sexual conflict is weaker in stressful or novel environments.

Citation

Holman, L., & Jacomb, F. (2017). The effects of stress and sex on selection, genetic covariance, and the evolutionary response. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 30(10), 1898-1909. https://doi.org/10.1111/jeb.13149

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 6, 2017
Online Publication Date Aug 20, 2017
Publication Date 2017-10
Deposit Date Feb 17, 2021
Journal Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Print ISSN 1010-061X
Electronic ISSN 1420-9101
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 30
Issue 10
Pages 1898-1909
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/jeb.13149
Keywords B matrix, environmental stress, fitness landscape, G matrix, Robertson–Price
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/2722840