Evolution in natural populations: Molecular marker-based inference of life history and quantitative genetic data

I develop and apply techniques that use molecular markers to infer critical evolutionary patterns in natural populations in general, and in particular to brook charr, 'Salvelinus fontinalis', inhabiting Freshwater River, Cape Race, Newfoundland. To facilitate quantitative genetic and other...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Morrissey, Michael B.
Other Authors: Ferguson, Moira M.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Guelph 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10214/22284
Description
Summary:I develop and apply techniques that use molecular markers to infer critical evolutionary patterns in natural populations in general, and in particular to brook charr, 'Salvelinus fontinalis', inhabiting Freshwater River, Cape Race, Newfoundland. To facilitate quantitative genetic and other evolutionary analyses, I developed techniques to aid in the collection of pedigree information and to facilitate power and sensitivity analyses. Based on estimates of genetic differentiation and direct estimates of individual movement Freshwater River brook charr are uniformly and relatively mobile throughout their life cycle. Using molecular markers to infer the relationship between body size and reproductive success, I obtained qualitatively different predictions of optimal life histories from previous estimates for which such molecular data and techniques were not available. My estimates suggest that early maturity is adaptive in this population, relative to estimates that have not been informed by molecular data to relate body size to reproductive success. My estimates explain some of the variation in age at first maturity in Freshwater River brook charr, and furthermore provide the first example of a qualitative difference between optimal life histories as evaluated with and without the use of molecular markers. Finally, I used molecular markers to provide both pedigree information and fitness information, via the recognition of surviving individuals, to measure natural selection on genetically-based variation in body size in Freshwater River brook charr. These pedigree and survival data allowed me to attempt the first explicit use of estimated genetic covariances to remove bias in estimates of natural selection due to environmentally-induced relationships among phenotypic variation and fitness components. I obtained no evidence of a relationship between body size and viability at either phenotypic or genetic levels. Thus the evolution of body size is at least partially constrained by a lack of selection and the currently ...