Volume 51, Issue 6 pp. 1910-1919
Article
Free Access

THE EVOLUTION OF THRESHOLD TRAITS: A QUANTITATIVE GENETIC ANALYSIS OF THE PHYSIOLOGICAL AND LIFE-HISTORY CORRELATES OF WING DIMORPHISM IN THE SAND CRICKET

Derek A. Roff

Derek A. Roff

Department of Biology, McGill University, 1205 Dr. Penfield Avenue, Montreal, Quebec, H3A 1B1 Canada

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Gray Stirling

Gray Stirling

Department of Biology, McGill University, 1205 Dr. Penfield Avenue, Montreal, Quebec, H3A 1B1 Canada

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Daphne J. Fairbairn

Daphne J. Fairbairn

Department of Biology, Concordia University, 1455 de Maisonneuve Boulevard, West, Montreal, Quebec, H3G 1M8 Canada

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First published: 31 May 2017
Citations: 45
Corresponding Editor: D. Howard

Abstract

Many traits are phenotypically discrete but polygenically determined. Such traits can be understood using the threshold model of quantitative genetics that posits a continuously distributed underlying trait, called the liability, and a threshold of response, individuals above the threshold displaying one morph and individuals below the threshold displaying the alternate morph. For many threshold traits the liability probably consists of a hormone or a suite of hormones. Previous experiments have implicated juvenile hormone esterase (JHE), a degratory enzyme of juvenile hormone, as a physiological determinant of wing dimorphism in the crickets Gryllus rubens and G. firmus. The present study uses a half-sib experiment to measure the heritability of JHE in the last nymphal stadium of G. firmus and its genetic correlation with fecundity, a trait that is itself genetically correlated with wing morph. The phenotypic and genetic parameters are consistent with the hypothesis that JHE is a significant component of the liability. Comparison of sire and dam estimates suggest that nonadditive effects may be important. Two models have been proposed to account for the fitness differences between morphs: the dichotomy model, which assumes that each morph can be characterized by a particular suite of traits, and the continuous model, which assumes that the associated fitness traits are correlated with the liability rather than the morphs themselves. The latter model predicts that the fitness differences will not be constant but change with the morph frequencies. Variation in fecundity and flight muscle histolysis are shown to be more consistent with the continuous model. Data from the present experiment on JHE are inconclusive, but results from a previous selection experiment also suggest that variation in JHE is consistent only with the continuous model.

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