A TEST OF THE CHITTY HYPOTHESIS: INHERITANCE OF LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS IN MEADOW VOLESMICROTUS PENNSYLVANICUS
- 1 September 1987
- Vol. 41 (5) , 929-947
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.1987.tb05868.x
Abstract
The Chitty hypothesis proposes that the demographic changes occurring in microtine cycles are mediated by natural selection operating on the genetic composition of the population. Implicit in this hypothesis is the assumption that a suite of life-history traits is simultaneously undergoing selection and that these traits are strongly heritable. We tested this in two ways: first, by determining whether the year-to-year differences in phenotypes in fluctuating meadow vole populations in the field are maintained in samples of young animals raised in the laboratory, and second, whether the variation seen in the field has a heritable basis as determined by half-sib analysis. Parents were obtained in the springs of successive years from a fluctuating meadow vole population. These animals were bred in small field enclosures, and their progeny were raised in the laboratory. Animals raised in the laboratory differed significantly from those in the natural field population. In the field, young from the year when population size was increasing grew more rapidly than those from the peak year; in the laboratory, the opposite occurred. The ages at sexual maturity showed similar differences. Heritability analysis was performed on body weight, growth rate, and age and weight at sexual maturity. Virtually all these traits showed significant dam effects, but small or nonexistant sire effects. Thus, most of the variation was nongenetic in origin; maternal and other environmental effects were of overriding importance. We conclude that the heritabilities of these traits in nature are usually lower than necessary for natural selection to operate in the time frames characteristic of microtine cycles.Funding Information
- the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
- Queen's University
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Maternal Effects on Body Size of Large Insular Peromyscus maniculatus: Evidence from Embryo Transfer ExperimentsJournal of Mammalogy, 1986
- Demography of Microtus pennsylvanicus in Southern Ontario: enumeration versus Jolly–Seber estimation comparedCanadian Journal of Zoology, 1985
- Genic Variation of the Rock Vole, Microtus chrotorrhinusJournal of Mammalogy, 1985
- Immigrant Selection, Predation, and the Distributions of Microtus pennsylvanicus and Blarina brevicauda on IslandsThe American Naturalist, 1984
- On Chitty's theory for fluctuating populations: The importance of genetic polymorphism in the generation of regular density cyclesJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1981
- Control of Female Maturation in High Density Populations of the Red-Backed Vole, Clethrionomys rufocanus bedfordiaeJournal of Animal Ecology, 1981
- Experimental alteration of sex ratios in populations of Microtus townsendii, a field voleCanadian Journal of Zoology, 1978
- Population Dynamics of Microtus Ochrogaster in Eastern KansasEcology, 1976
- Haemoglobin Levels, Growth and Survival in Two Microtus PopulationsEcology, 1962
- The Determination of the Median Body‐Weight at which Female Rats reach Maturity.Journal of Zoology, 1946