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Adaptive spread of a sexually selected syndrome eliminates an ancient color polymorphism in wall lizards

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2026
abstract:
Genetically determined color morphs are found in many animals. Polymorphism can be maintained by social selection if competitive interactions allow each morph to increase in frequency when rare. This reliance on negative frequency-dependent selection should make color polymorphism vulnerable to the appearance of novel phenotypes that disrupt competitive interactions among morphs. We show that the origin and adaptive spread of a sexually selected syndrome in common wall lizards (Podarcis muralis) selectively eliminates alleles coding for alternative color morphs that have been maintained for millions of years. The results demonstrate how the arrival of a novel phenotype can disrupt balancing selection, providing a link between rapid phenotypic evolution and the loss of color polymorphisms.
Iris type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
evolution; polymorpfism; lizard
List of contributors:
Uller, Tobias; Feiner, Nathalie; Sacchi, Roberto; Zuffi, Marco; Scali, Stefano; Pafilis, Panayiotis; Plavos, Konstantinos; Abalos, Javier; Andrade, Pedro; Aguilar, Prem; Salvi, Daniele; While, Geoffrey M
Authors of the University:
SACCHI ROBERTO
Handle:
https://iris.unipv.it/handle/11571/1544359
Published in:
SCIENCE
Journal
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