Abstract
AbstractVariation enables short-term evolution (microevolution), but its role in long-term evolution (macroevolution) is debated. Here, we analyzed a dataset ofDrosophilawing variation across six levels of biological organization to demonstrate that microevolutionary variation and macroevolutionary divergence are positively correlated at all levels from variation within an individual to 40 million years of macroevolution. Surprisingly, the strongest relationship was between developmental noise and macroevolutionary divergence—levels thought to be the most distant—whereas the relationship between standing genetic variation and population divergence was modest, despite established theoretical predictions. Our results indicate that the congruence of developmental system with long-term history of fluctuation in adaptive peaks creates dialectical relationships between microevolution and macroevolution.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference50 articles.
1. A Neo-Darwinian Commentary on Macroevolution
2. Approaches to Macroevolution: 2. Sorting of Variation, Some Overarching Issues, and General Conclusions
3. M. Kearney , B. S. Lieberman , L. C. Strotz , Tangled banks, braided rivers, and complex hierarchies: beyond microevolution and macroevolution. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, voae065 (2024).
4. D. J. Futuyma , M. Kirkpatrick , Evolution (Sinauer Associates, Inc., Publishers, Sunderland, Massachusetts, Fourth edition., 2017).
5. Ecological Character Displacement and Speciation in Sticklebacks