Reid Jane M, Nietlisbach Pirmin, Wolak Matthew E, Keller Lukas F, Arcese Peter
School of Biological Sciences University of Aberdeen Aberdeen United Kingdom.
Department of Zoology University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
Evol Lett. 2019 Apr 25;3(3):271-285. doi: 10.1002/evl3.118. eCollection 2019 Jun.
Appropriately defining and enumerating "fitness" is fundamental to explaining and predicting evolutionary dynamics. Yet, general theoretical concepts of fitness are often hard to translate into quantities that can be measured in wild populations experiencing complex environmental, demographic, genetic, and selective variation. Although the "fittest" entities might be widely understood to be those that ultimately leave most descendants at some future time, such long-term legacies can rarely be measured, impeding evaluation of the degree to which tractable short-term metrics of individual fitness could potentially serve as useful direct proxies. One opportunity for conceptual and empirical convergence stems from the principle of individual reproductive value ( ), here defined as the number of copies of each of an individual's alleles that is expected to be present in future generations given the individual's realized pedigree of descendants. As tightly predicts an individual's longer term genetic contribution, quantifying provides a tractable route to quantifying what, to date, has been an abstract theoretical fitness concept. We used complete pedigree data from free-living song sparrows () to demonstrate that individuals' expected genetic contributions stabilize within an observed 20-year (i.e. approximately eight generation) time period, allowing estimation of individual . Considerable among-individual variation in was evident in both sexes. Standard metrics of individual lifetime fitness, comprising lifespan, lifetime reproductive success, and projected growth rate, typically explained less than half the variation. We thereby elucidate the degree to which fitness metrics observed on individuals concur with measures of longer term genetic contributions and consider the degree to which analyses of pedigree structure could provide useful complementary insights into evolutionary outcomes.
恰当地定义和列举“适合度”是解释和预测进化动态的基础。然而,适合度的一般理论概念往往难以转化为可在经历复杂环境、人口、遗传和选择变异的野生种群中测量的数量。尽管人们普遍认为“最适合的”个体是那些最终在未来某个时候留下最多后代的个体,但这种长期的遗产很少能够被测量,这阻碍了对个体适合度的易处理短期指标能够潜在地作为有用直接代理的程度的评估。概念与实证融合的一个机会源于个体繁殖价值( )原则,这里将其定义为根据个体已实现的后代谱系,预计在后代中出现的个体每个等位基因的拷贝数。由于 紧密预测个体的长期遗传贡献,对 的量化提供了一条可处理的途径,用以量化迄今为止一直是抽象理论适合度概念的内容。我们使用来自自由生活的歌雀( )的完整谱系数据来证明,个体的预期遗传贡献在观察到的20年(即大约八代)时间段内趋于稳定,从而能够估计个体的 。两性之间在 上都存在明显的个体差异。个体终身适合度的标准指标,包括寿命、终身繁殖成功率和预计增长率,通常只能解释不到一半的变异。我们由此阐明了在个体上观察到的适合度指标与长期遗传贡献测量结果的一致程度,并考虑了谱系结构分析能够为进化结果提供有用补充见解的程度。