Abstract
Sexual selection must affect the genome for it to have an evolutionary impact, yet signatures of selection remain elusive. Here we use an individual-based model to investigate the utility of genome-wide selection components analysis, which compares allele frequencies of individuals at different life history stages within a single population to detect selection without requiring a priori knowledge of traits under selection. We modeled a diploid, sexually reproducing population and introduced strong mate choice on a quantitative trait to simulate sexual selection. Genome-wide allele frequencies in adults and offspring were compared using weighted FST values. The average number of outlier peaks (i.e., those with significantly large FST values) with a quantitative trait locus in close proximity (“real” peaks) represented correct diagnoses of loci under selection, whereas peaks above the FST significance threshold without a quantitative trait locus reflected spurious peaks. We found that, even with moderate sample sizes, signatures of strong sexual selection were detectable, but larger sample sizes improved detection rates. The model was better able to detect selection with more neutral markers, and when quantitative trait loci and neutral markers were distributed across multiple chromosomes. Although environmental variation decreased detection rates, the identification of real peaks nevertheless remained feasible. We also found that detection rates can be improved by sampling multiple populations experiencing similar selection regimes. In short, genome-wide selection components analysis is a challenging but feasible approach for the identification of regions of the genome under selection.
Highlights
One of the most important questions in evolutionary biology is how selection, which by definition acts on phenotypes, causes heritable changes (Nielsen 2005)
Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
To address whether genome-wide selection components analysis could be used in empirical studies of natural populations, we focused on the effects of sample size, strength of sexual selection, and environmental variance in the focal trait
Summary
One of the most important questions in evolutionary biology is how selection, which by definition acts on phenotypes, causes heritable changes (Nielsen 2005). Recent advances in DNA sequencing technologies have provided many new opportunities to explore how genomes are affected by selection, but no method currently exists to detect the signature of individual episodes of selection within the time frame of a single generation on a genome-wide scale. We know that total selection can be decomposed into several components of selection that affect individuals at various stages during the life cycle (Christiansen and Frydenberg 1973) and that these episodes can provide important insights into mating systems (Emlen and Oring 1977), or ecological factors acting as agents of selection (Loehle and Pechmann 1988). A method to detect the signature of each component of selection within a natural population would be an important addition to an evolutionary biologist’s toolkit
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