Prasad, N. G. ; Joshi, Amitabh (2003) What have two decades of laboratory life-history evolution studies onDrosophila melanogaster taught us? Journal of Genetics, 82 (1-2). pp. 45-76. ISSN 0022-1333
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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1007/BF02715881
Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02715881
Abstract
A series of laboratory selection experiments on Drosophila melanogaster over the past two decades has provided insights into the specifics of life-history tradeoffs in the species and greatly refined our understanding of how ecology and genetics interact in life-history evolution. Much of what has been learnt from these studies about the subtlety of the microevolutionary process also has significant implications for experimental design and inference in organismal biology beyond life-history evolution, as well as for studies of evolution in the wild. Here we review work on the ecology and evolution of life-histories in laboratory populations of D. melanogaster, emphasizing how environmental effects on life-history-related traits can influence evolutionary change. We discuss life-history tradeoffs - many unexpected - revealed by selection experiments, and also highlight recent work that underscores the importance to life-history evolution of cross-generation and cross-life-stage effects and interactions, sexual antagonism and sexual dimorphism, population dynamics, and the possible role of biological clocks in timing life-history events. Finally, we discuss some of the limitations of typical selection experiments, and how these limitations might be transcended in the future by a combination of more elaborate and realistic selection experiments, developmental evolutionary biology, and the emerging discipline of phenomics.
Item Type: | Article |
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Source: | Copyright of this article belongs to Indian Academy of Sciences. |
ID Code: | 121474 |
Deposited On: | 17 Jul 2021 06:10 |
Last Modified: | 17 Jul 2021 06:10 |
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