We describe a computer model that stimulates a combination of stabilizing and frequency-dependent selection acting on a quantitative character determined by several loci. The results correspond to many features of natural variations at both the phenotypic and genotypic levels. The model is robust, and its results are not strongly dependent either on the nature and shape of the function describing the stabilizing selection, or on the precise form of frequency dependence, except near the extrema. It suggests a mechanism for the maintenance of large amounts of variability, and shows a relation between population size and heterozygosity roughly corresponding to that found in nature. In this respect it is unlike the purely neutral model.
Computer models of selection acting on a quantitative character show that a combination of frequency-dependent and stabilizing selection can maintain many polymorphisms among the genes that determine the character. The models also show that the random order of mutations can give rise to selectively driven stochastic effects that are sometimes more important than random genetic drift. They suggest simple explanations for patterns of divergence between populations and species, and for apparent discrepancies between the rates of morphological and molecular evolution. They point towards a selective theory of 'molecular clocks'.
SUMMARYThe land snail Trichia hispida (L.) is polymorphic for shell and mantle colour. Sixteen pairs of samples were collected from Nottinghamshire sites with contrasting backgrounds. In comparisons between the members of each pair, all the samples from darker habitats had a higher proportion of dark-mantled morphs, and most had a higher proportion of dark-shelled morphs. These highly significant associations between habitat and morph-frequency provide good evidence of natural selection acting on these colour polymorphisms.
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