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Data from: Phenotypic selection in natural populations: what limits directional selection?

Cite this dataset

Kingsolver, Joel G; Diamond, Sarah E (2010). Data from: Phenotypic selection in natural populations: what limits directional selection? [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.7996

Abstract

Studies of phenotypic selection document directional selection in many natural populations. What factors reduce total directional selection, and the cumulative evolutionary responses to selection? We combine two datasets for phenotypic selection, representing more than 4600 distinct estimates of selection from 143 studies, to evaluate the potential roles of fitness trade-offs, indirect (correlated) selection, temporally varying selection, and stabilizing selection for reducing net directional selection and cumulative responses to selection. We detected little evidence that trade-offs among different fitness components reduced total directional selection in most study systems. Comparisons of selection gradients and selection differentials suggest that correlated selection frequently reduced total selection on size, but not on other types of traits. The direction of selection on a trait often changes over time in many temporally-replicated studies, but these fluctuations have limited impact in reducing cumulative directional selection in most study systems. Analyses of quadratic selection gradients indicated stabilizing selection on body size in at least some studies, but provided little evidence that stabilizing selection is more common than disruptive selection for most traits or study systems. Our analyses provide little evidence that fitness trade-offs, correlated selection or stabilizing selection strongly constrain the directional selection reported for most quantitative traits.

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