DOES LINKAGE DISEQUILIBRIUM GENERATE HETEROZYGOSITY-FITNESS CORRELATIONS IN GREAT REED WARBLERS?
- 1 April 2004
- Vol. 58 (4) , 870-879
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0014-3820.2004.tb00418.x
Abstract
Heterozygosity-fitness correlations (HFCs) at noncoding genetic markers are commonly assumed to reflect fitness effects of heterozygosity at genomewide distributed genes in partially inbred populations. However, in populations with much linkage disequilibrium (LD), HFCs may arise also as a consequence of selection on fitness loci in the local chromosomal vicinity of the markers. Recent data suggest that relatively high levels of LD may prevail in many ecological situations. Consequently, LD may be an important factor, together with partial inbreeding, in causing HFCs in natural populations. In the present study, we evaluate whether LD can generate HFCs in a small and newly founded population of great reed warblers (Acrocephalus arundinaceus). For this purpose dyads of full siblings of which only one individual survived to adult age (i.e., returned to breed at the study area) were scored at 19 microsatellite loci, and at a gene region of hypothesized importance for survival, the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). By examining siblings, we controlled for variation in the inbreeding coefficient and thus excluded genome-wide fitness effects in our analyses. We found that recruited individuals had significantly higher multilocus heterozygosity (MLH), and mean d2 (a microsatellite-specific variable), than their nonrecruited siblings. There was a tendency for the survivors to have a more diverse MHC than the nonsurvivors. Single-locus analyses showed that the strength of the genotype-survival association was especially pronounced at four microsatellite loci. By using genotype data from the entire breeding population, we detected significant LD between five of 162 pairs of microsatellite loci after accounting for multiple tests. Our present finding of a significant within-family multilocus heterozygosity-survival association in a nonequilibrium population supports the view that LD generates HFCs in natural populations.Keywords
This publication has 90 references indexed in Scilit:
- MHC class I typing in a songbird with numerous loci and high polymorphism using motif-specific PCR and DGGEHeredity, 2004
- MICROSATELLITE MEASURES OF INBREEDING: A META-ANALYSISEvolution, 2003
- Genetic Diversity, Population Subdivision, and Gene Flow in Morelet's Crocodile (Crocodylus moreletii) from Belize, Central AmericaIchthyology & Herpetology, 2002
- Restricted dispersal in a long-distance migrant bird with patchy distribution, the great reed warblerOecologia, 2002
- Comparing molecular measures for detecting inbreeding depressionJournal of Evolutionary Biology, 2002
- Outbreeding increases offspring survival in wild greater horseshoe bats (Rhinolophus ferrumequinum)Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2001
- Simultaneous inbreeding and outbreeding depression in reintroduced Arabian oryxAnimal Conservation, 2000
- Microsatellite Loci Reveal Sex-Dependent Responses to Inbreeding and Outbreeding in Red Deer CalvesEvolution, 1999
- Statistical confidence for likelihood‐based paternity inference in natural populationsMolecular Ecology, 1998
- Demography and Lifetime Reproductive Success in the Polygynous Great Reed WarblerJapanese Journal of Ornithology, 1995