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      The influence of stochastic and selective forces in the population divergence of female colour polymorphism in damselflies of the genus Ischnura.

      Heredity
      Animals, Biological Evolution, Female, Genetic Drift, Insects, anatomy & histology, classification, genetics, Pigmentation, Polymorphism, Genetic, Selection, Genetic

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          Abstract

          Disentangling the relative importance and potential interactions of selection and genetic drift in driving phenotypic divergence of species is a classical research topic in population genetics and evolutionary biology. Here, we evaluate the role of stochastic and selective forces on population divergence of a colour polymorphism in seven damselfly species of the genus Ischnura, with a particular focus on I. elegans and I. graellsii. Colour-morph frequencies in Spanish I. elegans populations varied greatly, even at a local scale, whereas more similar frequencies were found among populations in eastern Europe. In contrast, I. graellsii and the other five Ischnura species showed little variation in colour-morph frequencies between populations. F(ST)-outlier analyses revealed that the colour locus deviated strongly from neutral expectations in Spanish populations of I. elegans, contrasting the pattern found in eastern European populations, and in I. graellsii, where no such discrepancy between morph divergence and neutral divergence could be detected. This suggests that divergent selection has been operating on the colour locus in Spanish populations of I. elegans, whereas processes such as genetic drift, possibly in combination with other forms of selection (such as negative frequency-dependent selection), appear to have been present in other regions, such as eastern Europe. Overall, the results indicate that both selective and stochastic processes operate on these colour polymorphisms, and suggest that the relative importance of factors varies between geographical regions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          21587304
          3242623
          10.1038/hdy.2011.36

          Chemistry
          Animals,Biological Evolution,Female,Genetic Drift,Insects,anatomy & histology,classification,genetics,Pigmentation,Polymorphism, Genetic,Selection, Genetic

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