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Why is there so much genetic variation?
Forty years later evolutionary biologists still don't have a number of solid explanations for genetic variation in nature. However, a recent report in Nature by Fitzpatrick et al. shows that negative frequency dependent selection can maintain alternative feeding alleles in populations of fruit flies. Fruit fly larvae forage for food in two ways: by "roving" or "sitting". Rover larvae move around more than sitter larvae while feeding and they are also more likely to explore new food patches than sitters. Fitzpatrick et al. discovered that each type was favored by natural selection when rare. "If you're a rover surrounded by a number of sitters, then the sitters are going to use up that patch and you're going to do better by moving out into a new patch," says Marla Sokolowski, the PI on the research team. "So you'll have an advantage because you're not competing with the sitters who stay close to the initial resource. Conversely, if you're a sitter and you're mostly with rovers, the rovers are going to move out and you'll be left on the patch to feed without competition." Similar behaviors occur in C. elegans, which tend to clump or browse bacteria solitarily. I unsuccessfully looked for frequency and density dependent selection among these worms, but it is likely my assays weren't sensitive enough. The foraging gene is found in a number of animals, including honeybees, mice and humans. It is interesting to speculate on the roles that it plays in higher organisms, such as ourselves. Does it play any role in food-related behavioral disorders? |
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