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1 April 2002 THE EVOLUTION OF WING COLOR IN COLIAS BUTTERFLIES: HERITABILITY, SEX LINKAGE, AND POPULATION DIVERGENCE
Jacintha Ellers, Carol L. Boggs
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Abstract

We investigated the genetic background of intraspecific variation in wing color across an elevational gradient in the butterfly Colias philodice eriphyle. The degree of wing melanization was an accelerating function of elevation, and differences in wing melanization persisted in a common environment. Full-sibling analysis and parent-offspring regression yielded consistent, moderate to high heritabilities for the degree of wing melanization. The breeding experiments also demonstrated that wing melanization is strongly sex linked. Because traits that differentiate sister species also tend to be sex linked, our results suggest that the genetic mechanisms underlying intraspecific differences in wing melanization are not fundamentally different from those that have been shown to differentiate sister species.

Corresponding Editor: S. Pitnick

Jacintha Ellers and Carol L. Boggs "THE EVOLUTION OF WING COLOR IN COLIAS BUTTERFLIES: HERITABILITY, SEX LINKAGE, AND POPULATION DIVERGENCE," Evolution 56(4), 836-840, (1 April 2002). https://doi.org/10.1554/0014-3820(2002)056[0836:TEOWCI]2.0.CO;2
Received: 19 June 2001; Accepted: 1 January 2002; Published: 1 April 2002
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KEYWORDS
Ecological gradient
genetic adaptation
heritability
sex linkage
speciation
wing melanization
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