Harvest-induced phenotypic selection in an island population of moose, Alces alces

Empirical evidence strongly indicates that human exploitation has frequently led to rapid evolutionary changes in wild populations, yet the mechanisms involved are often poorly understood. Here, we applied a recently developed demographic framework for analyzing selection to data from a 20-year stud...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Evolution
Main Authors: Kvalnes, Thomas, Sæther, Bernt-Erik, Haanes, Hallvard, Røed, Knut, Engen, Steinar, Solberg, Erling Johan
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2490982
https://doi.org/10.1111/evo.12952
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Summary:Empirical evidence strongly indicates that human exploitation has frequently led to rapid evolutionary changes in wild populations, yet the mechanisms involved are often poorly understood. Here, we applied a recently developed demographic framework for analyzing selection to data from a 20-year study of a wild population of moose, Alces alces. In this population, a genetic pedigree has been established all the way back to founders. We demonstrate harvest-induced directional selection for delayed birth dates in males and reduced body mass as calf in females. During the study period, birth date was delayed by 0.81 days per year for both sexes, whereas no significant changes occurred in calf body mass. Quantitative genetic analyses indicated that both traits harbored significant additive genetic variance. These results show that selective harvesting can induce strong selection that oppose natural selection. This may cause evolution of less favorable phenotypes that become maladaptive once harvesting ceases. Age structure, animal model, microevolution, reproductive value, ungulate publishedVersion acceptedVersion