Genotypes selected for early and late avian lay date differ in their phenotype, but not fitness, in the wild
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30311Date
2023-06-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Lindner, Melanie; Ramakers, Jip Jc; Verhagen, Irene; Mizumo Tomotani, Barbara; Mateman, A Christa; Gienapp, Phillip; Visser, Marcel E.Abstract
Global warming has shifted phenological traits in many species, but whether species are able to track further
increasing temperatures depends on the fitness consequences of additional shifts in phenological traits. To test
this, we measured phenology and fitness of great tits (Parus major) with genotypes for extremely early and late
egg lay dates, obtained from a genomic selection experiment. Females with early genotypes advanced lay dates
relative to females with late genotypes, but not relative to nonselected females. Females with early and late
genotypes did not differ in the number of fledglings produced, in line with the weak effect of lay date on the
number of fledglings produced by nonselected females in the years of the experiment. Our study is the first
application of genomic selection in the wild and led to an asymmetric phenotypic response that indicates
the presence of constraints toward early, but not late, lay dates.
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of ScienceCitation
Lindner, Ramakers, Verhagen, Mizumo Tomotani, Mateman, Gienapp, Visser. Genotypes selected for early and late avian lay date differ in their phenotype, but not fitness, in the wild. Science Advances. 2023;9(23)Metadata
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