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No degradation of temperature-mediated phenotypic...
Journal article

No degradation of temperature-mediated phenotypic plasticity in Drosophila melanogaster after more than 275 generations of artificial selection on body-size.

Abstract

Body size is a fundamental trait that shapes a species' development and evolution. Importantly, body size can also be affected by environmental variables, especially development temperature. Here we measure phenotypic plasticity in a series of lineages that had experienced artificial selection on body size for over 275 generations. We found, despite substantial changes in overall size and sexual size dimorphism, only modest effects on developmental plasticity. Still, there were some significant, changes in the sex specific slopes of the relationship between size and rearing temperature, largely due to a reduction in plasticity in the treatment selected for small body size.

Authors

Ofodile YL; Appenteng J; Jaffri M; Dworkin I; Stewart AD

Journal

microPublication Biology, Vol. 2025, ,

Publication Date

January 1, 2025

DOI

10.17912/micropub.biology.001468

ISSN

2578-9430

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