Abstract

Transgenerational sources of biological variation have been at the center of evolutionary studies ever since Darwin and Wallace identified natural selection. This is because evolution can only operate on traits whose variation is transmitted, i.e. traits that are heritable. The discovery of genetic inheritance has led to a semantic shift, resulting in the tendency to consider that only genes are inherited across generations. Today, however, concepts of heredity are being broadened again to integrate the accruing evidence of non-genetic inheritance, and many evolutionary biologists are calling for the inclusion of non-genetic inheritance into an inclusive evolutionary synthesis. Here, we focus on social heredity and its role in the inheritance of behavioral traits. We discuss quantitative genetics methods that might allow us to disentangle genetic and non-genetic transmission in natural populations with known pedigrees. We then propose an experimental design based on cross-fostering among animal cultures, environments and families that has the potential to partition inherited phenotypic variation into socially (i.e. culturally) and genetically inherited components. This approach builds towards a new conceptual framework based on the use of an extended version of the animal model of quantitative genetics to integrate genetic and cultural components of behavioral inheritance.

Highlights

  • Ever since Darwin and Wallace identified natural selection, a central objective of evolutionary biology has been to evaluate the role of inheritance mechanisms on the evolution of phenotypic diversity

  • We offer and discuss an experimental design aimed at estimating the cultural component of the inclusive heritability of a behavioral trait

  • A first step is to quantify the relative weight of all components of inclusive heritability in the shaping of phenotypic variation

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Summary

Introduction

Ever since Darwin and Wallace identified natural selection, a central objective of evolutionary biology has been to evaluate the role of inheritance mechanisms on the evolution of phenotypic diversity. Animal models A promising opportunity to measure inclusive heritability and to evaluate the relative importance of genetic and non-genetic inheritance is the pedigree based ‘‘animal model’’ framework used in animal breeding and long-term studies of wild animal populations (reviews and methods in [43,44,45]).

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