AI Article Synopsis

  • Social interactions can influence an individual's fitness through social selection, which may act alongside or against natural selection, but there's limited research on its impact in the wild.
  • In a study of eastern chipmunks (Tamias striatus), researchers analyzed natural and social selection on traits like exploration, docility, and body mass using regression models, finding social selection mostly on female docility and male body mass.
  • Although social selection gradients were observed and varied by season, they did not significantly affect overall selection differentials, suggesting that natural selection alone likely drives phenotypic changes in this population.

Article Abstract

Through social interactions, phenotypes of conspecifics can affect an individual's fitness, resulting in social selection. Social selection is assumed to represent a strong and dynamic evolutionary force that can act with or in opposition to natural selection. Few studies, however, have estimated social selection and its contribution to total selection in the wild. We estimated natural and social selection gradients on exploration, docility, and body mass, and their contribution to selection differentials, in a wild eastern chipmunk population (Tamias striatus). We applied trait-based multiple regression models derived from classical phenotypic selection analyses, which allowed us to include several social partners (i.e., neighbors). We detected social selection gradients on female docility and male body mass, indicating that female with docile neighbors and males with large neighbors had lower fitness. In both sexes, social selection gradients varied with the season. However, we found no phenotypic assortment or disassortment for the studied traits. Social selection gradients, therefore, did not contribute to total selection differentials, and natural selection alone could drive phenotypic changes. Evaluating the factors that drive the evolution of the covariance between interacting phenotypes is necessary to understand the role of social selection as an evolutionary force.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/evo.13875DOI Listing

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