Berven Keith A
Department of Biological Sciences, Oakland University, Rochester, MI, 48035.
Evolution. 1987 Sep;41(5):1088-1097. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1987.tb05878.x.
This study compares the heritable basis of variation in larval developmental patterns of mountain and lowland populations of the wood frog, Rana sylvatica. Additive genetic variances, heritabilities, and genetic correlations for larval developmental time and size at metamorphosis are estimated from half-sib and full-sib crosses. Considerable additive-genetic variances and high heritabilities are revealed for developmental time in both the mountain and the lowland population. There was a high level of additive-genetic variance and high heritability for body size at metamorphosis in the mountain population, but these were very low in the lowland population. The genetic correlations between developmental rate and larval body size are negative for the mountain population and near zero for the lowland population. It is argued that the differences in genetic structure between these two populations reflect differences in the selective regimes of their respective environments.
本研究比较了林蛙(Rana sylvatica)山地种群和低地种群幼体发育模式变异的遗传基础。通过半同胞和全同胞杂交估算了幼体发育时间和变态时大小的加性遗传方差、遗传力和遗传相关性。山地种群和低地种群的发育时间均显示出相当大的加性遗传方差和高遗传力。山地种群变态时的体型具有高水平的加性遗传方差和高遗传力,但在低地种群中这些数值非常低。山地种群发育速率与幼体体型之间的遗传相关性为负,而低地种群则接近零。有人认为,这两个种群之间遗传结构的差异反映了它们各自环境选择机制的差异。