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Get Free AccessEnvironmental change, including climate change, can cause rapid phenotypic change via both ecological and evolutionary processes. Because ecological and evolutionary dynamics are intimately linked, a major challenge is to identify their relative roles. We exactly decomposed the change in mean body weight in a free-living population of Soay sheep into all the processes that contribute to change. Ecological processes contribute most, with selection--the underpinning of adaptive evolution--explaining little of the observed phenotypic trend. Our results enable us to explain why selection has so little effect even though weight is heritable, and why environmental change has caused a decline in the body size of Soay sheep.
Arpat Özgül, Shripad Tuljapurkar, Tim G. Benton, Josephine M. Pemberton, Tim Clutton-brock, Tim Coulson (2009). The Dynamics of Phenotypic Change and the Shrinking Sheep of St. Kilda. Science, 325(5939), pp. 464-467, DOI: 10.1126/science.1173668.
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Type
Article
Year
2009
Authors
6
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Science
DOI
10.1126/science.1173668
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