Szulkin Marta, Sheldon Ben C
Department of Zoology, Edward Grey Institute, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2007 Oct 10;2(10):e1027. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0001027.
Inbreeding depression occurs when the offspring produced as a result of matings between relatives show reduced fitness, and is generally understood as a consequence of the elevated expression of deleterious recessive alleles. How inbreeding depression varies across environments is of importance for the evolution of inbreeding avoidance behaviour, and for understanding extinction risks in small populations. However, inbreeding-by-environment (IxE) interactions have rarely been investigated in wild populations.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We analysed 41 years of breeding events from a wild great tit (Parus major) population and used 11 measures of the environment to categorise environments as relatively good or poor, testing whether these measures influenced inbreeding depression. Although inbreeding always, and environmental quality often, significantly affected reproductive success, there was little evidence for statistically significant I x E interactions at the level of individual analyses. However, point estimates of the effect of the environment on inbreeding depression were sometimes considerable, and we show that variation in the magnitude of the I x E interaction across environments is consistent with the expectation that this interaction is more marked across environmental axes with a closer link to overall fitness, with the environmental dependence of inbreeding depression being elevated under such conditions. Hence, our analyses provide evidence for an environmental dependence of the inbreeding x environment interaction: effectively an I x E x E.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Overall, our analyses suggest that I x E interactions may be substantial in wild populations, when measured across relevant environmental contrasts, although their detection for single traits may require very large samples, or high rates of inbreeding.
近亲繁殖衰退是指近亲交配产生的后代表现出适应性降低的情况,通常被认为是有害隐性等位基因表达增加的结果。近亲繁殖衰退如何随环境变化,对于近亲回避行为的进化以及理解小种群的灭绝风险具有重要意义。然而,在野生种群中,环境与近亲繁殖的相互作用(IxE)很少被研究。
方法/主要发现:我们分析了一个野生大山雀(Parus major)种群41年的繁殖事件,并使用11种环境指标将环境分为相对良好或较差两类,以测试这些指标是否会影响近亲繁殖衰退。尽管近亲繁殖始终且环境质量常常对繁殖成功率有显著影响,但在个体分析层面,几乎没有证据表明存在具有统计学意义的IxE相互作用。然而,环境对近亲繁殖衰退影响的点估计有时相当可观,并且我们表明,IxE相互作用强度在不同环境间的变化与这样的预期一致,即这种相互作用在与整体适应性联系更紧密的环境轴上更为显著,并在这种条件下近亲繁殖衰退对环境的依赖性会增强。因此,我们的分析为近亲繁殖与环境相互作用的环境依赖性提供了证据:实际上是一种IxExE。
结论/意义:总体而言,我们的分析表明,当在相关环境对比中进行测量时,IxE相互作用在野生种群中可能很显著,尽管对单一性状进行检测可能需要非常大的样本量或高近亲繁殖率。