Simon Evans

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10 Posts
Evolutionary ecologist at Exeter Uni. Loves Dartmoor, Sweden, XC skiing & Early Grey tea.
Quantitative genetics in the monk parakeet (Myiopsitta monachus) from central Argentina: Estimation of heritability and maternal effects on external morphological traits

The monk parakeet (Myiopsitta monachus) is a South American species unique among parrots; it builds communal stick nests that allow independence from tree or cliff cavities required by most parrots. As a very successful invasive species, it has expanded into several countries around the world. Questions remain around the factors that allowed this species to be such a successful invader in its native range as in other countries, and particularly the extent that evolutionary processes may be involved in adapting to new areas. Along with this line of analysis, we focused on assessing whether morphological characteristics are sufficiently heritable, and therefore responsive to selection. As the first step in this direction, we have estimated heritability of monk parakeet in six external morphological traits considered of potential adaptability value. Samples were obtained in the province of Córdoba in central Argentina. Data from seven microsatellites were used to determine the familial relationships among individuals. Heritabilities and genetic correlations were estimated by means of animal models. We found evidence for significant heritability in the six traits measured, particularly in weight, tarsus length and bill width. We also found evidence of maternal effects on morphological traits, particularly in the traits with lower heritability: wing length, bill length and tail length. Genetic correlations between traits were significant and associated with phenotypic correlations, suggesting that these traits are constrained in terms of evolutionary potential, whereas the amount of additive genetic variance in weight, tarsus length and bill width indicate that these traits could be responsive to selection.

Also interested in long-term individual-level studies of animal populations more generally that might be running in less economically developed countries and overseen by locals.
Thanks.

Does anyone know of quantitative genetic studies of free-living animal populations that are run by researchers outside Europe, North America and Australia/NZ?

Either there are some and I would love to find them, or there aren’t and that’s worth knowing.

Ooh, this is nice: variation lingering in the genome for being a good neighbour. https://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3001842
Increasing plant group productivity through latent genetic variation for cooperation

Some traditional breeding approaches select for “selfish” traits that can reduce yield in high-density monocultures. This paper proposes a simple method to identify plant genotypes that express more cooperative versus more competitive traits, based on how they grow in different social environments, and applies this method to a genetic study with Arabidopsis thaliana.

It's cool how programming delivers moments of extreme happiness. Today, I emailed myself in R.
There's a pretty big elephant in this particular room.
https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.3001809
Reanalysis shows there is not an extreme decline effect in fish ocean acidification studies

This Formal Comment uses re-analysis after appropriate corrections to claim that the extreme decline effect reported by Clements et al. is a statistical artefact caused by the way they corrected for zeros in percentage data, exacerbated by errors in data compilation, selective data inclusions and missing studies with strong effects.

@ProfBatGirl Sorry, still getting to grips with this platform. It's going straight to the review panel. I think possibly the review panel is being beefed up. But still, it seems really odd to abandon the decision process that was described to applicants.
Practically every article in current issue of Evolution seems to be about hybridisation and the impermanence of species. But – intriguingly in this context – nestled among them is this report on the opposite: speciation by hybridisation.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/evo.14508
@ProfBatGirl straight to multiple members of the panel.
Wow, NERC have eliminated peer review from the fellowship decision process, after the call deadline. So applicants wrote for an audience that doesn't exist.