| C E N T E R F O R T H E I N T E G R A T I V E S T U D Y O F A N I M A L B E H A V I O R |

Michael J. Wade
Abstracts of Selected Publications
| | Wade & Griesemer (1998) |
| | Wade & Goodnight(1999) |
| | Wade, Johnson & Toquenaqa (1999) |
| | Ph.D. Abstract |
| | |
| | Biology Wade Page |
| | Curriculum vitae |
| M.J. Wade and J.R. Griesemer. 1998. Populational heritability: Empirical studies of evoution in metapopulations. The American Naturalist 151:135-147. |
ABSTRACT
We critically review the two major theories of adaptive evolution developed early in this century, Wright's shifting balance theory and Fisher's large population size theory, in light of novel findings from field observations, laboratory experiments, and theoretical research conducted over the past 15 years. Ecological studies of metapopulations have established that the processes of local extinction and colonization of demes are relatively common in natural populations of many species and theoretical population genetic models have shown that these ecological processes have genetic consequences within and among local demes. Within demes, random genetic drift converts nonadditive genetic variance into additive genetic variance, increasing, rather than limiting, the potential for adaptation to local environments. For this reason, the genetic differences that arise by drift among demes, can be augmented by local selection. The resulting adaptive differences in gene combinations potentially contribute to the genetic origin of new species. These and other recent findings were not discussed by either Wright or Fisher. For example, although Wright emphasized epistatic genetic variance, he did not discuss the conversion process. Similarly, Fisher did not discuss how the average additive effect of a gene varies among demes across a metapopulation whenever there is epistasis. We discuss the implications of such recent findings for the Wright-Fisher controversy and identify some critical open questions that require additional empirical and theoretical study.
© 1998 The Society for the Study of Evolution. All rights reserved.
| M.J. Wade and C.J. Goodnight. 1998. Genetics and adaptation in metapopulations: When nature does many small experiments. Evolution 52:1537-1553. |
ABSTRACT
Using demes from experimental metapopulations of the flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, we investigated phase 3 Wright's shifting balance process. Using parent demes of high, intermediate, and low mean fitness, we experimentally modeled migration of varying amounts from demes of high mean fitness into demes of lower mean fitness (like phase 3). In natural populations, some migration (the opposite of phase 3). In natural populations, some migration among demes occurs independently of deme fitness. In this case, demes of high mean fitness are likely to receive migrants from demes of lower mean fitness; these effects might limit the effectiveness of phase 3 but have not been studied experimentally. We estimated the populational heritability of mean fitness by the regression of offspring deme means on the weighted parental means and found moderate levels of demic heritablity one (0.641-0.690) and to (0.518-0.552) generations after migration. We discuss our findings in relation to the role of interdemic migration in "adaptive peak shifts" in metapopulations and the controversies over group selection and the units of inheritance.
© 1998 by The University of Chicago.
| Michael J. Wade, Norman A. Johnson, and Yukihiko Toquenaqa. 1999. Temperature effects and genotype-by-environment interactions in hybrids: Haldane's rule in Flour Beetles. Evolution 53(3):855-865. |
ABSTRACT
When males of the flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, are crossed to females of its close relative T. freemani, the sex ratio of the hybrids is female biased, owing in part to hybrid male mortality. Morphological abnormalities are also frequent in the surviving hybrid males, but not in the hybrid females. The finding that the heterogametic sex (male) is more adversely affected in interspecific crosses than the homogametic sex is consistent with Haldane's rule, which predicts that hybrid dysfunction should emerge as an indirect byproduct of divergent adaptation to differing environments. If so, environmental effects and genotype-by-environment interactions (GEI) should characterize the expression of Haldane's rule and interspecific hybrid traits in general. We used two wild-collected populations of T. castaneum (from Infantes, Spain, and Madagascar) to investigate the effects of environmental variation on the expression of Haldane's rule. Males from each population were mated to several T. freemani females and the half-sibling hybrid progenies were reared across a series of temperature regimes. For both populations, we found that hybrids raised at higher temperatures exhibited a more extremem expresion of Haldane's rule: The hybrid sex ratios were more biasd toward females, and hybrid males had a much higher incidence of morphological abnormalities. The average response to temperature, the norm of reaction for Haldane's rule, varied between the two populations, and we found considerable and significant GEI for both hybrid traits within both populations. The evolutionary implications of these findings are discussed in the context of speciation arising as an indirect effect of local adaptation.
© 1999 The Society for the Study of Evolution.
| P h. D. Michael J. Wade. 1975. An Experimental Study of Group Selection. Ph.D. dissertation, The University of Chicago. |
| | Wade & Griesemer (1998) |
| | Wade & Goodnight(1999) |
| | Wade, Johnson & Toquenaqa (1999) |
| | Ph.D. Abstract |
| | |
| | Biology Wade Page |
| | Curriculum vitae |
| | PubMed search for MJ Wade publications |
| Michael J. Wade mjwade@bio.indiana.edu |
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