Commentary: When does understanding phenotypic evolution require identification of the underlying genes?

Evolution. 2015 Jul;69(7):1655-64. doi: 10.1111/evo.12687. Epub 2015 Jun 10.

Abstract

Adaptive evolution is fundamentally a genetic process. Over the past three decades, characterizing the genes underlying adaptive phenotypic change has revealed many important aspects of evolutionary change. At the same time, natural selection is often fundamentally an ecological process that can often be studied without identifying the genes underlying the variation on which it acts. This duality has given rise to disagreement about whether, and under what circumstances, it is necessary to identify specific genes associated with phenotypic change. This issue is of practical concern, especially for researchers who study nonmodel organisms, because of the often enormous cost and labor required to "go for the genes." We here consider a number of situations and questions commonly addressed by researchers. Our conclusion is that although gene identification can be crucial for answering some questions, there are others for which definitive answers can be obtained without finding underlying genes. It should thus not be assumed that considerations of "empirical completeness" dictate that gene identification is always desirable.

Keywords: Adaptation; Mendelian traits; evolutionary processes; gene identification; phenotype; quantitative traits.

MeSH terms

  • Biological Evolution*
  • Genetic Variation*
  • Selection, Genetic*