Genetic variance in fitness indicates rapid contemporary adaptive evolution in wild animals

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Authors

Bonnet, Timothee
Morrissey, Michael B.
De Villemereuil, Pierre
Alberts, Susan C.
Arcese, Peter
Bailey, Liam D.
Boutin, Stan
Brekke, Patricia
Brent, Lauren J.N.
Camenisch, Glauco

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science

Abstract

The rate of adaptive evolution, the contribution of selection to genetic changes that increase mean fitness, is determined by the additive genetic variance in individual relative fitness. To date, there are few robust estimates of this parameter for natural populations, and it is therefore unclear whether adaptive evolution can play a meaningful role in short-term population dynamics. We developed and applied quantitative genetic methods to long-term datasets from 19 wild bird and mammal populations and found that, while estimates vary between populations, additive genetic variance in relative fitness is often substantial and, on average, twice that of previous estimates. We show that these rates of contemporary adaptive evolution can affect population dynamics and hence that natural selection has the potential to partly mitigate effects of current environmental change.

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DATA AND MATERIALS AVAILABILITY : All code and data are available in the supplementary materials.

Keywords

Genetic variance, Fitness, Adaptive evolution, Wild bird, Mammals

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Bonnet, T., Morrissey, M.B., De Villemereuil, P., et al. 2022, 'Genetic variance in fitness indicates rapid contemporary adaptive evolution in wild animals', Science, vol. 376, art. 6596, pp. 1012-1016, doi : 10.1126/science.abk0853.