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INFERENCES ABOUT QUANTITATIVE INHERITANCE BASED ON NATURAL POPULATION STRUCTURE IN THE YELLOW MONKEYFLOWER, MIMULUS GUTTATUS
Author(s) -
Ritland Kermit,
Ritland Carol
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.84
H-Index - 199
eISSN - 1558-5646
pISSN - 0014-3820
DOI - 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1996.tb02348.x
Subject(s) - biology , heritability , inbreeding , dominance (genetics) , quantitative trait locus , quantitative genetics , population , natural population growth , ecology , genetic correlation , genetic variation , evolutionary biology , genetics , demography , sociology , gene
We used a nonmanipulative, marker‐based method to study quantitative genetic inheritance in two habitats of a common monkeyflower population. The method involved regressing quantitative trait similarity on marker‐estimated relatedness between individuals sampled in the field. We sampled 300 adult plants from each of two transects, one along a stream habitat and another through a meadow habitat. For each plant we measured 10 quantitative characters and assayed 10 polymorphic isozyme loci. In the meadow habitat, relatedness of plants within 1 m was moderate ( r = 0.125, corresponding to half‐sibs) as was actual variance of relatedness ( V r = 0.044). Significant heritabilities of 50–70% were found for corolla width and the fitness characters of flower number and plant weight. Genetic correlations were strongly positive, but sharing of environmental effects within 1 m was weak. In the stream habitat, levels of relatedness were lower and similar heritabilities were indicated. To detect dominance variance and the correlation of phenotypes due to shared inbreeding, we also estimated higher‐order coefficients of relationship and inbreeding, but these did not significantly differ from zero. Laboratory‐based estimates of heritability in the field were lower than the marker‐based estimates, indicating that natural heritabilities and genetic correlations may be stronger than indicated by controlled studies.