RESPONSES TO SELECTION AMONG LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS IN A NONMIGRATORY POPULATION OF MILKWEED BUGS (ONCOPELTUS FASCIATUS).

Evolution

Department of Biology, Program in Evolutionary Ecology and Behavior, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, 52242.

Published: January 1988

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed genetic parameters in a nonmigratory Puerto Rico population of the milkweed bug and compared them to a migratory population from Iowa.
  • Initial analysis revealed heritabilities and genetic correlations among various traits like wing length and fecundity.
  • Selection experiments showed both populations have similar additive genetic variance for wing length, but Puerto Rico bugs did not show significant genetic correlations between fecundity and other traits, suggesting a different evolutionary pathway.

Article Abstract

Genetic parameters were assessed in the nonmigratory Puerto Rico population of the milkweed bug, Oncopeltus fasciatus, and compared with parameters estimated in a migratory population from Iowa (Palmer and Dingle, 1986). Offspring-parent regression analysis provided initial estimates of heritabilities and phenotypic and genetic correlations among wing length, head-capsule width, female age at first reproduction, fecundity for the first and second five days of reproduction by females, and clutch size for the first and second five days of reproduction by females. Replicated bidirectional selection for wing length was then imposed, with a direct response to selection revealing substantial additive genetic variance for this trait, as was also the case with the Iowa population. Assays for correlated response to selection yielded two further similarities to Iowa: a positive response in head-capsule width and no consistent response in age at first reproduction. In contrast to the results with Iowa bugs, neither regression analysis nor selection revealed statistically significant genetic correlations between fecundity measures and those of other traits. In both populations the potential exists for body-size characters to evolve together independently of age at first reproduction; but in the nonmigratory Puerto Rico bugs, fecundity does not contribute to a life-history syndrome involving genetic correlations among these traits.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.1988.tb04109.xDOI Listing

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