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Quantitative genetics of body size evolution on islands: an individual-based simulation approach
Author(s) -
José Alexandre Felizola DinizFilho,
Lucas Jardim,
Thiago F. Rangel,
Philip B. Holden,
Neil R. Edwards,
Joaquín Hortal,
Ana M. C. Santos,
Pasquale Raia
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
biology letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.596
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1744-957X
pISSN - 1744-9561
DOI - 10.1098/rsbl.2019.0481
Subject(s) - biology , dwarfing , quantitative genetics , evolutionary biology , population genetics , adaptation (eye) , ecology , perspective (graphical) , population , evolutionary dynamics , population size , genetic variation , demography , genetics , gene , neuroscience , artificial intelligence , sociology , computer science
According to the island rule, small-bodied vertebrates will tend to evolve larger body size on islands, whereas the opposite happens to large-bodied species. This controversial pattern has been studied at the macroecological and biogeographical scales, but new developments in quantitative evolutionary genetics now allow studying the island rule from a mechanistic perspective. Here, we develop a simulation approach based on an individual-based model to model body size change on islands as a progressive adaptation to a moving optimum, determined by density-dependent population dynamics. We applied the model to evaluate body size differentiation in the pigmy extinct hominin showing that dwarfing may have occurred in only about 360 generations (95% CI ranging from 150 to 675 generations). This result agrees with reports suggesting rapid dwarfing of large mammals on islands, as well as with the recent discovery that small-sized hominins lived in Flores as early as 700 kyr ago. Our simulations illustrate the power of analysing ecological and evolutionary patterns from an explicit quantitative genetics perspective.

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