20 results match your criteria: "Annual Review Of Ecology Evolution And Systematics[Journal]"

Patterns and evolutionary consequences of pleiotropy.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

November 2023

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA.

Pleiotropy refers to the phenomenon of one gene or one mutation affecting multiple phenotypic traits. While the concept of pleiotropy is as old as Mendelian genetics, functional genomics has finally allowed the first glimpses of the extent of pleiotropy for a large fraction of genes in a genome. After describing conceptual and operational difficulties in quantifying pleiotropy and the pros and cons of various methods for measuring pleiotropy, I review empirical data on pleiotropy, which generally show an L-shaped distribution of the degree of pleiotropy (i.

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What Amphibians Can Teach Us About the Evolution of Parental Care.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

November 2023

Faculty of Biological Sciences, Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.

Parenting is considered a key evolutionary innovation that contributed to the diversification and expansion of vertebrates. However, we know little about how such diversity evolved. Amphibians are an ideal group in which to identify the ecological factors that have facilitated or constrained the evolution of different forms of parental care.

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Local adaptation: Causal agents of selection and adaptive trait divergence.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

November 2022

Department of Genetics and Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 30602.

Divergent selection across the landscape can favor the evolution of local adaptation in populations experiencing contrasting conditions. Local adaptation is widely observed in a diversity of taxa, yet we have a surprisingly limited understanding of the mechanisms that give rise to it. For instance, few have experimentally confirmed the biotic and abiotic variables that promote local adaptation, and fewer yet have identified the phenotypic targets of selection that mediate local adaptation.

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Parasite avoidance is a host defense that reduces the contact rate with parasites. We investigate avoidance as a primary driver of variation among individuals in the risk of parasitism and the evolution of host-parasite interactions. To bridge mechanistic and taxonomic divides, we define and categorize avoidance by its function and position in the sequence of host defenses.

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Complex statistical methods are continuously developed across the fields of ecology, evolution, and systematics (EES). These fields, however, lack standardized principles for evaluating methods, which has led to high variability in the rigor with which methods are tested, a lack of clarity regarding their limitations, and the potential for misapplication. In this review, we illustrate the common pitfalls of method evaluations in EES, the advantages of testing methods with simulated data, and best practices for method evaluations.

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Effects of Selection at Linked Sites on Patterns of Genetic Variability.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

November 2021

School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85281, USA.

Patterns of variation and evolution at a given site in a genome can be strongly influenced by the effects of selection at genetically linked sites. In particular, the recombination rates of genomic regions correlate with their amount of within-population genetic variability, the degree to which the frequency distributions of DNA sequence variants differ from their neutral expectations, and the levels of adaptation of their functional components. We review the major population genetic processes that are thought to lead to these patterns, focusing on their effects on patterns of variability: selective sweeps, background selection, associative overdominance, and Hill-Robertson interference among deleterious mutations.

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Gene Drive Dynamics in Natural Populations: The Importance of Density Dependence, Space, and Sex.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

November 2020

Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695, USA.

The spread of synthetic gene drives is often discussed in the context of panmictic populations connected by gene flow and described with simple deterministic models. Under such assumptions, an entire species could be altered by releasing a single individual carrying an invasive gene drive, such as a standard homing drive. While this remains a theoretical possibility, gene drive spread in natural populations is more complex and merits a more realistic assessment.

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Life Ascending: Mechanism and Process in Physiological Adaptation to High-Altitude Hypoxia.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

November 2019

Department of Biology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4K1, Canada.

To cope with the reduced availability of O at high altitude, air-breathing vertebrates have evolved myriad adjustments in the cardiorespiratory system to match tissue O delivery with metabolic O demand. We explain how changes at interacting steps of the O transport pathway contribute to plastic and evolved changes in whole-animal aerobic performance under hypoxia. In vertebrates native to high altitude, enhancements of aerobic performance under hypoxia are attributable to a combination of environmentally induced and evolved changes in multiple steps of the pathway.

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Evolutionary and ecological consequences of gut microbial communities.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

November 2019

Department of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78703 USA.

Animals are distinguished by having guts: organs that must extract nutrients from food while barring invasion by pathogens. Most guts are colonized by non-pathogenic microorganisms, but the functions of these microbes, or even the reasons why they occur in the gut, vary widely among animals. Sometimes these microorganisms have co-diversified with hosts; sometimes they live mostly elsewhere in the environment.

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Rapid adaptive radiation poses a distinct question apart from speciation and adaptation: what happens after one speciation event? That is, how are some lineages able to continue speciating through a rapid burst? This question connects global macroevolutionary patterns to microevolutionary processes. Here we review major features of rapid radiations in nature and their mismatch with theoretical models and what is currently known about speciation mechanisms. Rapid radiations occur on three major diversification axes - species richness, phenotypic disparity, and ecological diversity - with exceptional outliers on each axis.

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An Integrative Framework for Understanding the Mechanisms and Multigenerational Consequences of Transgenerational Plasticity.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

July 2019

Department of Evolution, Ecology and Behavior, School of Integrative Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA.

Transgenerational plasticity (TGP) occurs when the environment experienced by a parent influences the development of their offspring. In this article, we develop a framework for understanding the mechanisms and multi-generational consequences of TGP. First, we conceptualize the mechanisms of TGP in the context of communication between parents (senders) and offspring (receivers) by dissecting the steps between an environmental cue received by a parent and its resulting effects on the phenotype of one or more future generations.

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Understanding the processes that generate and maintain genetic variation within populations is a central goal in evolutionary biology. Theory predicts that some of this variation is maintained as a consequence of adapting to variable habitats. Studies in herbivorous insects have played a key role in confirming this prediction.

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Structure and functioning of dryland ecosystems in a changing world.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

November 2016

Departamento de Biología y Geología, Física y Química Inorgánica, Escuela Superior de Ciencias Experimentales y Tecnología, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Calle Tulipán s/n, 28933 Móstoles, Spain.

Understanding how drylands respond to ongoing environmental change is extremely important for global sustainability. Here we review how biotic attributes, climate, grazing pressure, land cover change and nitrogen deposition affect the functioning of drylands at multiple spatial scales. Our synthesis highlights the importance of biotic attributes (e.

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Evolutionary biologists often predict the outcome of natural selection on an allele by measuring its effects on lifetime survival and reproduction of individual carriers. However, alleles affecting traits like sex, evolvability, and cooperation can cause fitness effects that depend heavily on differences in the environmental, social, and genetic context of individuals carrying the allele. This variability makes it difficult to summarize the evolutionary fate of an allele based solely on its effects on any one individual.

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Modularity: genes, development and evolution.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

September 2016

Laboratório de Evolução de Mamíferos, Departamento de Genética e Biologia Evolutiva, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, 05508-090, Brazil.

Modularity has emerged as a central concept for evolutionary biology, providing the field with a theory of organismal structure and variation. This theory has reframed long standing questions and serves as a unified conceptual framework for genetics, developmental biology and multivariate evolution. Research programs in systems biology and quantitative genetics are bridging the gap between these fields.

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On the Nature and Evolutionary Impact of Phenotypic Robustness Mechanisms.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

November 2014

Institute of Molecular Biology, Academia Sinica, Nankang, Taipei, Taiwan 11529;

Biologists have long observed that physiological and developmental processes are insensitive, or robust, to many genetic and environmental perturbations. A complete understanding of the evolutionary causes and consequences of this robustness is lacking. Recent progress has been made in uncovering the regulatory mechanisms that underlie environmental robustness in particular.

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Population Genomics of Human Adaptation.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

November 2013

Departments of Biology and Genetics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.

Recent advances in genotyping technologies have facilitated genome-wide scans for natural selection. Identification of targets of natural selection will shed light on processes of human adaptation and evolution and could be important for identifying variation that influences both normal human phenotypic variation as well as disease susceptibility. Here we focus on studies of natural selection in modern humans who originated ~200,000 years go in Africa and migrated across the globe ~50,000 - 100,000 years ago.

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The Utility of Fisher's Geometric Model in Evolutionary Genetics.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

November 2014

IAME, UMR 1137, INSERM, F-75018 Paris, France ; IAME, UMR 1137, Univ. Paris Diderot, Sorbonne Paris Cité, F-75018 Paris, France.

The accumulation of data on the genomic bases of adaptation has triggered renewed interest in theoretical models of adaptation. Among these models, Fisher Geometric Model (FGM) has received a lot of attention over the last two decades. FGM is based on a continuous multidimensional phenotypic landscape, but it is for the emerging properties of individual mutation effects that it is mostly used.

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Revisiting the Impact of Inversions in Evolution: From Population Genetic Markers to Drivers of Adaptive Shifts and Speciation?

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

December 2008

Centre for Environmental Stress and Adaptation Research, Department of Genetics, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010 Australia; email:

There is a growing appreciation that chromosome inversions affect rates of adaptation, speciation, and the evolution of sex chromosomes. Comparative genomic studies have identified many new paracentric inversion polymorphisms. Population models suggest that inversions can spread by reducing recombination between alleles that independently increase fitness, without epistasis or coadaptation.

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Chemical Complexity and the Genetics of Aging.

Annu Rev Ecol Evol Syst

December 2007

Center for Research on Ageing, University College London, Darwin Building, Gower Street, London, WC1E6BT.

We examine how aging is impacted by various chemical challenges that organisms face and by the molecular mechanisms that have evolved to regulate lifespan in response to them. For example, environmental information, which is detected and processed through sensory systems, can modulate lifespan by providing information about the presence and quality of food as well as presence and density of conspecifics and predators. In addition, the diverse forms of molecular damage that result from constant exposure to damaging chemicals that are generated from the environment and from metabolism pose an informatic and energetic challenge for detoxification systems, which are important in ensuring longevity.

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