Günter P. Wagner
Ginger Booth
and
Homayoun Bagheri-Chaichian
Department of Biology
and
Center for Computational Ecology
Yale University
New Haven, CT 06520
Canalization is the suppression of phenotypic variation. Depending on the
causes of phenotypic variation one speaks either of genetic or environmental
canalization. Genetic canalization describes insensitivity of a character to
mutations, and the insensitivity to environmental factors is called
environmental canalization. Genetic canalization is of interest because it
influences the availability of heritable phenotypic variation to natural
selection and is thus potentially important in determining the pattern of
phenotypic evolution. In this paper a number of population genetic models are
considered of a quantitative character under stabilizing selection. The main
purpose of this study is to define the population genetic conditions and
constraints for the evolution of canalization. Environmental canalization
is
modeled as genotype specific environmental variance. It is shown that
stabilizing selection favors genes which decrease environmental variance of
quantitative characters. However, the theoretical limit of zero environmental
variance has never been observed. Of the many ways to explain this fact,
two are addressed by our model. It is shown that a "canalization limit" is
reached if canalizing effects of mutations are correlated with direct effects
on the same character. This canalization limit is predicted to be independent
of the strength of stabilizing selection, which is inconsistent with recent
experimental data (Stearns et al., 1995). The second model assumes that the
canalizing genes have deleterious pleiotropic effects. If these deleterious
effects are of the same magnitude as all the other mutations affecting fitness
very strong stabilizing selection is required to allow the evolution of
environmental canalization.
Genetic canalization is modeled as an influence
on the average effect of mutations at a locus of other genes. It is found that
the selection for genetic canalization critically depends on the amount of
genetic variation present in the population. The more genetic variation the
stronger the selection for
canalizing effects. All factors which increase genetic variation favor the evolution of genetic
canalization (population size, mutation rate, number of genes).
If genetic variation is
maintained by mutation-selection balance, strong stabilizaing selection can inhibit the
evolution of genetic canalization. Strong stabilizing selection eliminates genetic variation to
a level where selection for canalization does not work anymore.
It is predicted the the most important characters (in terms of fitness) are not necessarily
the most canalized ones, if they
are under very strong stabilizing selection (
, Fig. 13). The rate of decrease
of mutational variance
is found to be less than 10% of the initial
.
From this result it is
concluded that characters with typical mutational variances of about
are in a
metastable state where further evolution of genetic canalization is too slow to be of
importance at a microevolutionary time scale. The implications for the explantion of
macro-evolutionary patterns are discussed.