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Journal ArticleDOI

Genetics and Evolution of Phenotypic Plasticity

Samuel M. Scheiner
- 01 Jan 1993 - 
- Vol. 24, Iss: 1, pp 35-68
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TLDR
Phenotypic plasticity is the change in the expressed phenotype of a genotype as a function of the environment, and is likely due both to differences in allelic expression across environments and to changes in interactions among loci.
Abstract
To achieve a coherent evolutionary theory, it is necessary to account for the effects of the environment on the process of development. Phenotypic plasticity is the change in the expressed phenotype of a genotype as a function of the environment. Various measures of plasticity exist, many of which can be united within the framework of a polynomial function. This function is the norm of reaction. For the special case of a linear reaction norm, genetic variation can be partitioned into portions that are independent and dependent on the environment. From this partition two heritability measures are derived which can be used, alternatively, to compare populations or make predictions about the response to selection. Genetically, plasticity is likely due both to differences in allelic expression across environments and to changes in interactions among loci; plasticity is not a function of heterozygosity. Plasticity responds to both artificial and natural selection. The evolution of plasticity is modeled in thre...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Phenotypic plasticity in insects: the effects of substrate color on the coloration of two ground-hopper species

TL;DR: These findings show that color polymorphism may not only be maintained by natural selection acting on discrete color morphs, but also by phenotypic plasticity, which enables organisms to adjust to the environmental conditions experienced during ontogeny.
Journal Article

Plastic response to pond drying in tadpoles Rana temporaria: tests of cost models

TL;DR: Tadpoles from two types of ponds, temporary and permanent, were raised in a common garden experiment and tadpoles exhibited a plastic response to pond drying: they metamorphosed earlier in the shallow than in the deep tanks, suggesting a trade-off between time and size.
Journal ArticleDOI

Natural selection. I. Variable environments and uncertain returns on investment.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a concise introduction to the two key aspects of the theory of relative success and the hierarchical structure of variability in populations, and place particular problems in their proper relation to the general theory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Light-induced morphological plasticity in the scleractinian coral Goniastrea pectinata and its functional significance

TL;DR: Environment-induced i.e., phenotypically plastic, changes in morphology, are potentially an important life-history component of sessile corals and a two-dimensional model of corallite shape was constructed to explore the functional significance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quaternary Murid Rodents of Timor Part I: New Material of Coryphomys buehleri Schaub, 1937, and Description of a Second Species of the Genus

TL;DR: Comparisons highlight two potentially related lineages among the geographically proximate Murinae—the Philippine Phloeomyini and the Australo-Papuan Hydromyini and suggest that both species of Coryphomys were found primarily in upland habitats.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The evolution of life histories

TL;DR: In this article, age and size at maturity at maturity number and size of offspring Reproductive lifespan and ageing are discussed. But the authors focus on the effects of age and stage structure on fertility.
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Evolution in Mendelian Populations.

TL;DR: Page 108, last line of text, for "P/P″" read "P′/ P″."
Journal ArticleDOI

The measurement of selection on correlated characters

TL;DR: Measures of directional and stabilizing selection on each of a set of phenotypically correlated characters are derived, retrospective, based on observed changes in the multivariate distribution of characters within a generation, not on the evolutionary response to selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stability Parameters for Comparing Varieties

S. A. Eberhart, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1966 - 
TL;DR: The model, Yij = μ1 + β1Ij + δij, defines stability parameters that may be used to describe the performance of a variety over a series of environments to see whether genetic differences could be detected.