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Polymorphism (biology)



 
 
Polymorphism in biology occurs when two or more clearly different phenotypes exist in the same population of a species — in other words, the occurrence of more than one form or morph.

The shorter term morphism may be more accurate than polymorphism, but is not often used.






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Black Jaguar
Polymorphism in biology occurs when two or more clearly different phenotypes exist in the same population of a species — in other words, the occurrence of more than one form or morph.

The shorter term morphism may be more accurate than polymorphism, but is not often used. It was the preferred term of the evolutionary biologist Julian Huxley
Julian Huxley

Sir Julian Sorell Huxley Fellow of the Royal Society was an English evolutionary biologist, Humanist and Internationalism . He was a proponent of natural selection, and a leading figure in the mid-twentieth century evolutionary synthesis....
.

Polymorphism is extremely common; it is a kind of variation related to biodiversity
Biodiversity

Biodiversity is the variation of life forms within a given ecosystem, biome, or for the entire Earth. Biodiversity is often used as a measure of the health of biological systems....
, genetic variation and adaptation
Adaptation

Adaptation is the process, which takes place under natural selection, whereby an organism becomes better suited to its habitat. Also, the term may refer to some characteristic which stands out as being especially significant in the organism's survival....
. Polymorphism usually functions to retain variety of form in a population living in a varied environment. The most common example of polymorphism is the sexual dimorphism
Sexual dimorphism

Sexual dimorphism is the systematic difference in form between individuals of different sex in the same species. Examples include color , size, and the presence or absence of parts of the body used in courtship displays or fights, such as ornamental feathers, horns, antlers or tusks....
 of most higher organisms; this retains diversity by the process of genetic recombination
Genetic recombination

Genetic recombination is the process by which a strand of genetic material is broken and then joined to a different DNA molecule. In eukaryotes recombination commonly occurs during meiosis as chromosomal crossover between paired chromosomes....
. Other examples are mimetic forms of butterflies (see mimicry), certain cryptic
Cryptic

Cryptic can refer to:* Crypsis, of animals that are difficult to observe* Cryptic crossword, a crossword with cryptic clues* Cryptic era, earliest period of the Earth...
 forms of moths, the banding pattern on snail shells, human blood groups and many other cases.

Polymorphism (Greek: poly = many, and morph = form) is often defined as the presence of more than one genetically distinct type in a single population — meaning, the population is in the same location and is interbreeding. The term was first used to describe visible forms, but by extension we now use the term to include cryptic morphs, for instance blood types, which can be made manifest by a test.

Polymorphism results from an evolutionary process, as does any aspect of a species. Polymorphism is heritable, and is modified by selection
Selection

In the context of evolution, certain traits or alleles of a species may be subject to selection depending on the Pragmatics the user has with the word....
 (either artificial
Artificial selection

Artificial selection describes intentional breeding for certain traits, or combination of traits. It was defined by Charles Darwin in contrast to natural selection, in which the differential reproduction of organisms with certain traits is attributed to improved survival or reproductive ability ....
 or in the wild
Natural selection

Natural selection is the process by which favorable heritable trait become more common in successive generations of a population of Reproduction organisms, and unfavorable heritable traits become less common, due to differential reproduction of genotypes....
). In polyphenism
Polyphenism

A polyphenic trait is a trait for which multiple, discrete phenotypes can arise from a single genotype as a result of differing environmental conditions....
, an individual's genetic make-up allows for different morphs, and the switch mechanism that determines which morph is shown is environmental. In genetic polymorphism or balanced polymorphism, the genetic make-up determines the morph. Ants exhibit both types of morphism.

Polymorphism as described here involves morphs of the phenotype
Phenotype

A phenotype is any observable characteristic or trait_ of an organism: such as its morphology , development, biochemical or physiological properties, or behavior....
. The term is also used somewhat differently by molecular biologists to describe certain point mutations in the genotype
Genotype

The genotype is the trait we can't see. The genotype is the Genetics constitution of a cell, an organism, or an individual usually with reference to a specific character under consideration....
, such as SNP
Single nucleotide polymorphism

A single-nucleotide polymorphism is a DNA sequence variation occurring when a single nucleotide — adenine, thymine, cytosine, or guanine — in the genome differs between members of a species ....
s (see also RFLPs). This usage is not discussed in this article.

What polymorphism is not

Although in general use polymorphism is quite a broad term, in biology it has been given a specific meaning. This section indicates its proper use.

  • The term omits continuous variation (such as weight) even though this has a heritable component. Polymorphism deals with forms in which the variation is discrete (discontinuous) or strongly bimodal or polymodal.
  • Morphs must occupy the same habitat at the same time: this excludes geographical races and seasonal forms. The use of the words morph or polymorphism for what is a visibly different geographical race or variant is common, but incorrect. The significance of geographical variation (allopatry) is that interbreeding between different locations is reduced or eliminated, a possible prelude to species splitting. True polymorphism takes place in panmictic populations, and has to do with the adaptation of a species to its environment.
  • Rare variations are not classified as polymorphisms; and mutations by themselves do not constitute polymorphisms. To qualify as a polymorphism there has to be some kind of balance between morphs underpinned by inheritance. The criterion is that the frequency of the least common morph is too high simply to be the result of new mutation
    Mutation

    In biology, mutations are changes to the nucleotide sequence of the genetic material of an organism. Mutations can be caused by copying errors in the genetic material during cell division, by exposure to ultraviolet or ionizing radiation, chemical mutagens, or virus , or can be induced by the organism, itself, by cellular processes such as s...
    s or, as a rough guide, that it is greater than 1 percent (though that is far higher than any normal mutation rate for a single allele).


Nomenclature

  • Terminology.
    This topic crosses several discipline boundaries: ecology and genetics, at least; evolution theory, taxonomy, cytology and biochemistry also occur. Different disciplines may give the same concept different names, and different concepts may be given the same name. We use here the terms established in ecological genetics by Ford, and for classical genetics Maynard Smith.


  • Synonyms for the different forms.
    They can be called morphs or morphotypes; trait (biology)
    Trait (biology)

    A trait is a distinct variant of a phenotype character of an organism that may be inherited, environmentally determined or somewhere in between....
     and characters are also possible descriptions, though that might imply just a limited aspect of the body. Phase is sometimes used, but morph or form is best.


  • Taxonomic nomenclature.
    In zoology
    Zoology

    Zoology is the branch of biology concerned with the study of animals. The most common pronunciation of "zoology" is ; however, an alternative pronunciation is ....
     the word "morpha" plus a Latin name for the morph can be added to a binomial
    Binomial nomenclature

    In biology, binomial nomenclature is the formal system of naming species. The system is called binominal nomenclature , binary nomenclature , or the binomial classification system....
     or trinomial
    Trinomial nomenclature

    In biology, trinomial nomenclature refers to names for taxa below the rank of species. This is different for animals and plants:* for animals see trinomen....
     name. However, this invites confusion with geographical variation
    Ring species

    In biology, a ring species is a connected series of neighboring populations that can interbreed with relatively closely related populations, but for which there exist at least two "end" populations in the series that are too distantly related to interbreed....
    , especially with polytypic species or sub-species. Morphs have no formal standing in the ICZN
    ICZN

    ICZN may refer to:*International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature, an organization*International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, published by that organization...
    .
    In botany
    Botany

    Botany, plant science, phytology, or plant biology is a branch of biology and is the Scientific method of plant life and development....
    , morphs may be named with the terms "variety", "subvariety
    Subvariety

    In botanical nomenclature, a subvariety is a taxonomic rank below that of Variety but above that of Form : it is an infraspecific taxon. Its name consists of three parts: a genus name, a specific epithet and an infraspecific epithet....
    ", and "forms
    Form (botany)

    In botanical nomenclature, a form is a low-level taxonomic rank below that of Variety ; it is an infraspecific taxon. Its name consists of three parts: a genus name, a specific epithet, and an infraspecific epithet....
    " which are formally regulated by the ICBN. There might be confusion with the term variety.


Ecology

Selection, whether natural or artificial, changes the frequency of morphs within a population; this occurs when morphs reproduce with different degrees of success. A genetic (or balanced) polymorphism usually persists over many generations, maintained by two or more opposed and powerful selection pressures. Diver (1929) found banding morphs in Cepaea nemoralis could be seen in pre-fossil shells going back to the Mesolithic
Mesolithic

The Mesolithic or Middle Stone Age was a period in the development of human technology in between the Paleolithic or Old Stone Age and the Neolithic or New Stone Age....
 Holocene
Holocene

The Holocene is a geological Epoch which began approximately 11,700 years ago . According to traditional geological thinking, the Holocene continues to the present....
. Apes have similar blood groups to humans: human and chimpanzee blood, with compatible blood groups, can be exchanged through transfusion (Great Ape Project
Great Ape Project

The Great Ape Project , founded in 1993, is an international organization of primatologists, psychologists, ethicists, and other experts who advocate a United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Great Apes that would confer basic legal rights on non-human great apes: chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans....
). This suggests rather strongly that this kind of polymorphism is quite ancient, at least as far back as the last common ancestor of the apes and man, and possibly even further.

Albino Monarch Butterfly
The relative proportions of the morphs may vary; the actual values are determined by the effective fitness
Effective fitness

In evolution and artificial evolution the fitness of a schema is rescaled to give its effective fitness which takes into account crossover and Mutation ....
 of the morphs at a particular time and place. The mechanism of heterozygote advantage
Heterozygote advantage

A heterozygote advantage describes the case in which the Zygosity genotype has a higher relative fitness than either the Zygosity dominant gene or homozygote recessive gene genotype....
 assures the population of some alternative alleles at the locus
Locus

The word locus is Latin for "place". It can mean:...
 or loci involved. Only if competing selection disappears will an allele disappear. However, heterozygote advantage is not the only way a polymorphism can be maintained. Apostatic selection
Apostatic selection

Apostatic selection is Frequency dependent selection selection by predators, particularly in regard to prey that are different morphs of a Polymorphism that is not a mimic of another species....
, whereby a predator consumes a common morph whilst overlooking rarer morphs is possible and does occur. This would tend to preserve rarer morphs from extinction.

A polymorphic population does not initiate speciation
Speciation

Speciation is the evolutionary process by which new biological species arise. The biologist Orator F. Cook seems to have been the first to coin the term 'speciation' for the splitting of lineages or 'cladogenesis,' as opposed to 'anagenesis' or 'phyletic evolution' occurring within lineages....
; nor does it prevent speciation. It has little or nothing to do with species splitting. However, it has a lot to do with the adaptation
Adaptation

Adaptation is the process, which takes place under natural selection, whereby an organism becomes better suited to its habitat. Also, the term may refer to some characteristic which stands out as being especially significant in the organism's survival....
 of a species to its environment
, which may vary in colour, food supply, predation and in many other ways. Polymorphism is one good way the opportunities get to be used; it has survival value, and the selection of modifier genes may reinforce the polymorphism.

Polymorphism and niche diversity
G. Evelyn Hutchinson
G. Evelyn Hutchinson

George Evelyn Hutchinson was an English Americans zoologist known for his studies of freshwater lakes and considered the father of American limnology....
, a founder of niche research, commented "It is very likely from an ecological point of view that all species, or at least all common species, consist of populations adapted to more than one niche." He gave as examples sexual size dimorphism and mimicry. In many cases where the male is short-lived and smaller than the female, he does not compete with her during her late pre-adult and adult life. Size difference may permit both sexes to exploit different niches. In elaborate cases of mimicry, such as the African butterfly Papilio
Papilio

File:Citrus Swallowtail Papilio demodocus.jpgPapilio is a genus in the swallowtail butterfly family , Papilionidae. It includes a number of well-known North American species such as the Western Tiger Swallowtail, Papilio rutulus....
 dardanus
, female morphs mimic a range of distasteful models, often in the same region. The fitness of each type of mimic decreases as it becomes more common, so the polymorphism is maintained by frequency-dependent selection. Thus the efficiency of the mimicry is maintained in a much increased total population.

The switch
The mechanism which decides which of several morphs an individual displays is called the switch. This switch may be genetic, or it may be environmental. Taking sex determination as the example, in man the determination is genetic, by the XY sex-determination system
XY sex-determination system

The XY sex-determination system is the sex-determination system found in humans, most other mammals, some insects and some plants . In this system, females have two of the same kind of sex chromosome , and are called the homogametic sex....
. In Hymenoptera
Hymenoptera

Hymenoptera is one of the larger order s of insects, comprising the sawfly, wasps, bees, and ants. The name refers to the membranous wings of the insects, and is derived from the Ancient Greek language wikt:???? : membrane and wikt:pte??? : wing....
 (ants, bees and wasps), sex determination is by haplo-diploidy: the females are all diploid, the males are haploid. However, in some animals an environmental trigger determines the sex: alligators are a famous case in point. In ants the distinction between workers and guards is environmental, by the feeding of the grubs. Polymorphism with an environmental trigger is called polyphenism
Polyphenism

A polyphenic trait is a trait for which multiple, discrete phenotypes can arise from a single genotype as a result of differing environmental conditions....
.

The polyphenic system does have a degree of environmental flexibility not present in the genetic polymorphism. However, such environmental triggers are the less common of the two methods.

Investigative methods
Investigation of polymorphism requires a coming together of field and laboratory technique. In the field:
  • detailed survey of occurrence, habits and predation
  • selection of an ecological area or areas, with well-defined boundaries
  • capture, mark, release, recapture data (see Mark and recapture
    Mark and recapture

    Mark and recapture is a method commonly used in ecology to estimate population size. This method is most valuable when a researcher fails to detect all individuals present within a population of interest every time that researcher visits the study area....
    )
  • relative numbers and distribution of morphs
  • estimation of population sizes
And in the laboratory:
  • genetic data from crosses
  • population cages
  • chromosome
    Chromosome

    A chromosome is an organized structure of DNA and protein that is found in Cell . A chromosome is a single piece of DNA that contains many genes, regulatory sequence and other genetic sequence....
     cytology
    Cytology

    Cytology means "the study of cell s".Cytology is that branch of life science, which deals with the study of cells in terms of structure, function and chemistry....
     if possible
  • use of chromatography
    Chromatography

    Chromatography is the collective term for a family of laboratory techniques for the separation of mixtures. It involves passing a mixture dissolved in a "mobile phase" through a stationary phase, which separates the analyte to be measured from other molecules in the mixture and allows it to be isolated....
     or similar techniques if morphs are cryptic (for example, biochemical)
Both types of work are equally important. Without proper field-work the significance of the polymorphism to the species is uncertain; without laboratory breeding the genetic basis is obscure. Even with insects the work may take many years; examples of Batesian mimicry
Batesian mimicry

Batesian mimicry is a form of mimicry typified by a situation where a harmless species has evolved to imitate the warning signals of a harmful species directed at a common predator....
 noted in the nineteenth century are still being researched.

Genetics


Genetic polymorphism
Since all polymorphism has a genetic basis, genetic polymorphism has a particular meaning:
  • Genetic polymorphism is the occurrence together in the same locality of two or more discontinuous forms of a species in such proportions that the rarest of them cannot be maintained just by recurrent mutation. It is sometimes called balancing selection
    Balancing selection

    Balancing selection refers to forms of natural selection which work to maintain genetic polymorphism within a population. Balancing selection is in contrast to directional selection which favors a single allele....
    , and is intimately connected with the idea of heterozygote advantage
    Heterozygote advantage

    A heterozygote advantage describes the case in which the Zygosity genotype has a higher relative fitness than either the Zygosity dominant gene or homozygote recessive gene genotype....
    .


The definition has three parts: a) sympatry: one interbreeding population; b) discrete forms; and c) not maintained just by mutation.

Pleiotropism
Most genes have more than one effect on the phenotype
Phenotype

A phenotype is any observable characteristic or trait_ of an organism: such as its morphology , development, biochemical or physiological properties, or behavior....
 of an organism (pleiotropism). Some of these effects may be visible, and others cryptic, so it is often important to look beyond the most obvious effects of a gene to identify other effects. Cases occur where a gene affects an unimportant visible character, yet a change in fitness is recorded. In such cases the gene's other (cryptic or 'physiological') effects may be responsible for the change in fitness.
"If a neutral trait is pleiotropically linked to an advantageous one, it may emerge because of a process of natural selection. It was selected but this doesn't mean it is an adaptation. The reason is that, although it was selected, there was no selection for that trait."

Epistasis
Epistasis
Epistasis

Epistasis is the interaction between genes. Epistasis takes place when the action of one gene is modified by one or several other genes, which are sometimes called modifier genes....
 occurs when the expression of one gene is modified by another gene. For example, gene A only shows its effect when allele B1 (at another locus
Locus

The word locus is Latin for "place". It can mean:...
) is present, but not if it is absent. This is one of the ways in which two or more genes may combine to produce a co-ordinated change in more than one characters (in, for instance, mimicry). Unlike the supergene, epistatic genes do not need to be closely linked
Genetic linkage

Genetic linkage occurs when particular genetic Locus or alleles for genes are inherited jointly. Genetic loci on the same chromosome are physically connected and tend to stay together during meiosis, and are thus genetically linked....
 or even on the same chromosome
Chromosome

A chromosome is an organized structure of DNA and protein that is found in Cell . A chromosome is a single piece of DNA that contains many genes, regulatory sequence and other genetic sequence....
.

Both pleiotropism and epistasis show that a gene need not relate to a character in the simple manner that was once supposed.

The origin of supergenes
Although a polymorphism can be controlled by alleles at a single locus
Locus

The word locus is Latin for "place". It can mean:...
 (eg human ABO
Abo

Abo may refer to:*Abo , a pueblo ruin in New Mexico, in the U.S.*?bo, the Swedish name for Turku in Finland*ABO blood group system*Abo of Tiflis, a christian saint...
 blood groups), the more complex forms are controlled by supergene
Supergene

A supergene is a group of neighbouring genes on a chromosome which are inherited together because of close genetic linkage and are functionally related in an evolutionary sense, although they are rarely gene regulation genetically....
s consisting of several tightly linked genes on a single chromosome
Chromosome

A chromosome is an organized structure of DNA and protein that is found in Cell . A chromosome is a single piece of DNA that contains many genes, regulatory sequence and other genetic sequence....
. Batesian mimicry
Batesian mimicry

Batesian mimicry is a form of mimicry typified by a situation where a harmless species has evolved to imitate the warning signals of a harmful species directed at a common predator....
 in butterflies and heterostyly
Heterostyly

Heterostyly is a unique form of polymorphism and herkogamy in flowers. In a heterostylous species, two or three different morphological types of flowers, termed morphs, exist in the population....
 in angiosperms are good examples. There is a long-standing debate as to how this situation could have arisen, and the question is not yet resolved.

Whereas a gene family
Gene family

A gene family is a set of genes with a known homology . They are generally biochemically similar. Genes are categorized this way into families, depending on shared nucleotide or protein sequences....
 (several tighly linked genes performing similar or identical functions) arises by duplication of a single original gene, this is usually not the case with supergenes. In a supergene some of the constituent genes have quite distinct functions, so they must have come together under selection. This process might involve suppression of crossing-over, translocation of chromosome fragments and possibly occasional cistron duplication. That crossing-over can be suppressed by selection has been known for many years.

Debate has tended to centre round the question: Could the component genes in a super-gene have started off on separate chromosomes, with subsequent reorganization, or is it necessary for them to start on the same chromosome? Originally, it was held that chromosome rearrangement would play an important role. This explanation was accepted by E.B. Ford
E.B. Ford

Edmund Brisco "Henry" Ford, Fellow of the Royal Society, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians was a United Kingdom ecological genetics. He was a leader among those British biologists who investigated the role of natural selection in nature....
 and incorporated into his accounts of ecological genetics.

However, today many believe it more likely that the genes start on the same chromosome. They argue that supergenes arose in situ. This is known as Turner's sieve hypothesis. Maynard Smith agreed with this view in his authoritative textbook, but the question is still not definitively settled.

Relevance for evolutionary theory


Polymorphism was crucial to research in ecological genetics
Ecological genetics

Ecological genetics is the study of genetics in the context of the interactions among organisms and between the organisms and their environment....
 by E.B. Ford
E.B. Ford

Edmund Brisco "Henry" Ford, Fellow of the Royal Society, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians was a United Kingdom ecological genetics. He was a leader among those British biologists who investigated the role of natural selection in nature....
 and his co-workers from the mid-1920s to the 1970s (similar work continues today, especially on mimicry). The results had a considerable effect on the mid-century evolutionary synthesis, and on present evolutionary theory. The work started at a time when natural selection
Natural selection

Natural selection is the process by which favorable heritable trait become more common in successive generations of a population of Reproduction organisms, and unfavorable heritable traits become less common, due to differential reproduction of genotypes....
 was largely discounted as the leading mechanism for evolution, continued through the middle period when Sewall Wright
Sewall Wright

Sewall Green Wright was an American geneticist known for his influential work on evolutionary theory and also for his work on path analysis . With R....
's ideas on drift
Genetic drift

Genetic drift or allelic drift is the change in the relative frequency with which a gene variant occurs in a population that results from the fact that alleles in offspring are a Sampling of those in the parents, and because of the role of chance in determining whether a given individual survives and reproduces....
 were prominent, to the last quarter of the 20th century when ideas such as Kimura
Motoo Kimura

, was a Japanese biologist best known for introducing the neutral theory of molecular evolution in 1968. He became one of the most influential population geneticss....
's neutral theory of molecular evolution
Neutral theory of molecular evolution

The neutral theory of molecular evolution is an influential theory that was introduced with provocative effect by Motoo Kimura in the late 1960s and early 1970s, which states that the vast majority of evolutionary changes at the molecular level are caused by random drift of selectively neutral mutants....
 was given much attention. The significance of the work on ecological genetics is that it has shown how important selection is in the evolution of natural populations, and that selection is a much stronger force than was envisaged even by those population geneticists who believed in its importance, such as Haldane and Fisher
Ronald Fisher

Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher, Fellow of the Royal Society was an England statistician, evolutionary biologist, and genetics. He was described by Anders Hald as "a genius who almost single-handedly created the foundations for modern statistical science" and Richard Dawkins described him as "the greatest of Charles Darwin successors"....
.

In just a couple of decades the work of Fisher
Ronald Fisher

Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher, Fellow of the Royal Society was an England statistician, evolutionary biologist, and genetics. He was described by Anders Hald as "a genius who almost single-handedly created the foundations for modern statistical science" and Richard Dawkins described him as "the greatest of Charles Darwin successors"....
, Ford
E.B. Ford

Edmund Brisco "Henry" Ford, Fellow of the Royal Society, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians was a United Kingdom ecological genetics. He was a leader among those British biologists who investigated the role of natural selection in nature....
, Cain
Arthur Cain

Professor Arthur James Cain FRS was a British evolutionary biologist and ecologist. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1989....
, Sheppard
Philip Sheppard

Professor Philip MacDonald Sheppard, Royal Society was a United Kingdom geneticist and lepidopterist. He made advances in ecological genetics and population genetics in lepidoptera, pulmonate land snails and humans....
 and Clarke
Cyril Clarke

Sir Cyril Astley Clarke Order of the British Empire, Royal College of Physicians, Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, Royal College of Pathologists, Fellow of the Royal Society was a United Kingdom physician, geneticist and lepidopterist....
 promoted natural selection as the primary explanation of variation in natural populations, instead of genetic drift. Evidence can be seen in Mayr's famous book Animal species and evolution, and Ford's Ecological genetics. Similar shifts in emphasis can be seen in most of the other participants in the evolutionary synthesis, such as Stebbins
G. Ledyard Stebbins

George Ledyard Stebbins, Jr. was an United States botany and geneticist who is widely regarded as one of the leading evolutionary biology of the 20th century....
 and Dobzhansky
Theodosius Dobzhansky

Theodosius Grygorovych Dobzhansky, also known as T. G. Dobzhansky, and sometimes Anglicized to Theodore Dobzhansky was a noted genetics and evolutionary biologist, and a central figure in the field of evolutionary biology for his work in shaping the unifying modern evolutionary synthesis....
, though the latter was slow to change.

Kimura
Motoo Kimura

, was a Japanese biologist best known for introducing the neutral theory of molecular evolution in 1968. He became one of the most influential population geneticss....
 drew a distinction between molecular evolution, which he saw as dominated by selectively neutral mutations, and phenotypic characters, probably dominated by natural selection rather than drift. This does not conflict with the account of polymorphism given here, though most of the ecological geneticists believed that evidence would gradually accumulate against his theory.

Examples


Sexual dimorphism
We meet genetic polymorphism daily, since our species (like most other eukaryotes) uses sexual reproduction
Sexual reproduction

Sexual reproduction is characterized by processes that pass a Genetic recombination of Genetics material to offspring, resulting in Genetic diversity....
, and of course, the sexes are differentiated. The system is relatively stable (with about half of the population of each sex) and heritable, usually by means of sex chromosomes. Every aspect of this everyday phenomenon bristles with questions for the theoretical biologist. Why is the ratio ~50/50? How could the evolution of sex
Evolution of sex

Scientists currently have developed several competing hypotheses to explain the evolution of sexual reproduction. Many groups of organisms, notably the majority of animals and plants, sexual reproduction....
 occur from an original situation of asexual reproduction, which has the advantage that every member of a species could reproduce? Why the visible differences between the sexes? These questions have engaged the attentions of biologists such as Charles Darwin
Charles Darwin

Charles Robert Darwin Royal Society was an English people natural history who realised and presented compelling evidence that all species of life have evolution over time from common descent, through the process he called natural selection....
, August Weismann, Ronald Fisher
Ronald Fisher

Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher, Fellow of the Royal Society was an England statistician, evolutionary biologist, and genetics. He was described by Anders Hald as "a genius who almost single-handedly created the foundations for modern statistical science" and Richard Dawkins described him as "the greatest of Charles Darwin successors"....
, George C. Williams
George C. Williams

Professor George Christopher Williams is an United States evolutionary biologist.Williams is a professor of biology at the State University of New York at Stony Brook....
, John Maynard Smith and W.D. Hamilton, with varied success.

Although this huge topic cannot be treated here in detail, it is fair to say there is widespread agreement on the following: the advantage of sexual and hermaphroditic reproduction
Hermaphrodite

A hermaphrodite is an organism having both male and female reproductive organs. In many species, hermaphroditism is a common part of the life-cycle, enabling a form of sexual reproduction in which partners are not separated into distinct male and female types of individual....
 over asexual reproduction
Asexual reproduction

Asexual reproduction is reproduction which does not involve meiosis, ploidy reduction, or fertilization. Only one parent is involved in asexual reproduction....
 lies in the way recombination
Genetic recombination

Genetic recombination is the process by which a strand of genetic material is broken and then joined to a different DNA molecule. In eukaryotes recombination commonly occurs during meiosis as chromosomal crossover between paired chromosomes....
 increases the genetic diversity
Genetic diversity

Genetic diversity is a level of biodiversity that refers to the total number of Genetics characteristics in the genetic makeup of a species. It is distinguished from genetic variability, which describes the tendency of genetic characteristics to vary....
 of the ensuing population. The advantage of sexual reproduction over hermaphroditic is not so clear. In forms that have two separate sexes, same sex combinations are excluded from mating
Mating

In biology, mating is the pairing of same-sex, opposite-sex or hermaphrodite organisms for copulation and, in social animals, also to raise their offspring....
 which decreases the amount of diversity compared with hermaphrodites by at least twice. So, why are almost all progressive species bi-sexual, considering the asexual process is more efficient and simple, whilst hermaphrodites produce a more diversified progeny? It has been suggested that differentiation into two sexes has evolutionary advantages allowing changes to concentrate in the male part of the population and at the same time preserving the existing genotype distribution in the females. This enables the population to better meet the challenges of infection
Infection

An infection is the detrimental colonization of a host organism by a foreign species. In an infection, the infecting organism seeks to utilize the host resources to multiply ....
, parasitism
Parasitism

Parasitism is a type of Symbiosis relationship between two different organisms where one organism, the parasite, takes from the host , sometimes for a prolonged time....
, predation
Predation

In ecology, predation describes a biological interaction where a predator feeds on its prey, the organism that is attacked. Predators may or may not kill their prey prior to feeding on them, but the act of predation always results in the death of the prey....
 and other hazards of the varied environment. See also evolution of sex
Evolution of sex

Scientists currently have developed several competing hypotheses to explain the evolution of sexual reproduction. Many groups of organisms, notably the majority of animals and plants, sexual reproduction....
.

Other human polymorphisms
Apart from sexual dimorphism, there are many other examples of human genetic polymorphisms. Infectious disease has been a major factor in human mortality, and so has affected the evolution of human populations. Evidence is now strong that many polymorphisms are maintained in human populations by balancing selection.

  • Human blood groups.
    All the common blood types, such as the ABO
    Abo

    Abo may refer to:*Abo , a pueblo ruin in New Mexico, in the U.S.*?bo, the Swedish name for Turku in Finland*ABO blood group system*Abo of Tiflis, a christian saint...
     system, are genetic polymorphisms. Here we see a system where there are more than two morphs: the phenotypes are A, B, AB and O are present in all human populations, but vary in proportion in different parts of the world. The phenotypes are controlled by multiple alleles at one locus
    Locus

    The word locus is Latin for "place". It can mean:...
    . These polymorphisms are seemingly never eliminated by natural selection; the reason came from a study of disease statistics.
    Statistical research has shown that the various phenotypes are more, or less, likely to suffer a variety of diseases. For example, an individual's susceptibility to cholera
    Cholera

    Cholera, sometimes known as Asiatic or epidemic cholera, is an infectious gastroenteritis caused by enterotoxin-producing strains of the bacterium Vibrio cholerae....
     (and other diarrheal infections) is correlated with their blood type: those with type O blood are the most susceptible, while those with type AB are the most resistant. Between these two extremes are the A and B blood types, with type A being more resistant than type B. This suggests that the pleiotropic effects of the genes set up opposing selective forces, thus maintaining a balance.
    Geographical distribution of blood groups (the differences in gene frequency between populations) is broadly consistent with the classification of races developed by anthropologists on the basis of visible features. See also Duffy antigen system.


  • Sickle-cell anaemia.
    Such a balance is seen more simply in sickle-cell anaemia, which is found mostly in tropical populations in Africa
    Africa

    Africa is the world's second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. At about 30.2 million km? including adjacent islands, it covers 6% of the Earth's total surface area and 20.4% of the total land area....
     and India
    India

    India, officially the Republic of India , is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and outlying territories by total area country by geographical area, the List of countries by population country, and the most populous liberal democracy in the world....
    . An individual homozygous for the recessive sickle haemoglobin, HgbS, has a short expectancy of life, whereas the life expectancy of the standard haemoglobin (HgbA) homozygote and also the heterozygote is normal (though heterozygote individuals will suffer periodic problems).
    So why does the sickle-cell variant survive in the population? Because the heterozygote is resistant to malaria and the malarial parasite kills a huge number of people each year. This is balancing selection
    Balancing selection

    Balancing selection refers to forms of natural selection which work to maintain genetic polymorphism within a population. Balancing selection is in contrast to directional selection which favors a single allele....
     or genetic polymorphism, balanced between fierce selection against homozygous sickle-cell sufferers, and selection against the standard HgbA homozygotes by malaria. The heterozygote has a permanent advantage (a higher fitness) so long as malaria exists; and it has existed as a human parasite for a long time. Because the heterozygote survives, so does the HgbS allele
    Allele

    An allele is one member of a pair or series of different forms of a gene. Usually alleles are coding region, but sometimes the term is used to refer to a junk DNA....
     survive at a rate much higher than the mutation rate
    Mutation rate

    In genetics, the mutation rate is the chance of a mutation occurring in an organism or gene in each generation . The mutation frequency is the number of individuals in a population with a particular mutation, and tends to be reported more often as it is easier to measure ....
     (see and refs in Sickle-cell disease
    Sickle-cell disease

    Sickle-cell disease or sickle-cell anaemia is a life-long blood disorder characterized by red blood cells that assume an abnormal, rigid, sickle shape....
    ).


  • G6PD
    G6PD (Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase) human polymorphism is also implicated in malarial resistance. G6PD alleles with reduced activity are maintained at a high level in endemic malarial regions, despite reduced general viability. Variant A (with 85% activity) reaches 40% in sub-Saharan Africa, but is generally <1% outside Africa and the Middle East.


  • Human taste morphisms.
    A famous puzzle in human genetics is the genetic ability to taste phenylthiourea (phenylthiocarbamide or PTC), a morphism which was discovered in 1931. This substance, which to some of us is bitter, and to others tasteless, is of no great significance in itself, yet it is a genetic dimorphism. Because of its high frequency (which varies in different ethnic groups) it must be connected to some function of selective value.
    The ability to taste PTC itself is correlated with the ability to taste other bitter substances, many of which are toxic. Indeed, PTC itself is toxic, though not at the level of tasting it on litmus paper. Variation in PTC perception may reflect variation in dietary preferences throughout human evolution, and might correlate with susceptibility to diet-related diseases in modern populations. There is a statistical correlation between PTC tasting and liability to thyroid disease.
    Fisher
    Ronald Fisher

    Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher, Fellow of the Royal Society was an England statistician, evolutionary biologist, and genetics. He was described by Anders Hald as "a genius who almost single-handedly created the foundations for modern statistical science" and Richard Dawkins described him as "the greatest of Charles Darwin successors"....
    , Ford
    E.B. Ford

    Edmund Brisco "Henry" Ford, Fellow of the Royal Society, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians was a United Kingdom ecological genetics. He was a leader among those British biologists who investigated the role of natural selection in nature....
     and Huxley
    Julian Huxley

    Sir Julian Sorell Huxley Fellow of the Royal Society was an English evolutionary biologist, Humanist and Internationalism . He was a proponent of natural selection, and a leading figure in the mid-twentieth century evolutionary synthesis....
     tested orang-utans and chimpanzees for PTC perception with positive results, thus demonstrating the long-standing existence of this dimorphism. The recently identified PTC gene, which accounts for 85% of the tasting variance, has now been analysed for sequence variation with results which suggest selection is maintaining the morphism.


  • Lactose tolerance/intolerance. The ability to metabolize lactose
    Lactose intolerance

    Lactose intolerance is the inability to Metabolism lactose, a sugar found in milk and other dairy products, because the required enzyme lactase is absent in the intestinal system or its availability is lowered....
    , a sugar found in milk and other dairy products, is a prominent dimorphism that has been linked to recent human evolution.


The Cuckoo
Over fifty species in this family of birds practise brood parasitism; the details are best seen in the British or European Cuckoo (Cuculus canorus). The female lays 15–20 eggs in a season, but only one in each nest of another bird. She removes some or all of the host's clutch of eggs, and lays an egg which closely matches the host eggs. Although, in Britain, the hosts are always smaller than the Cuckoo itself, the eggs she lays are small, and coloured to match the host clutch but thick-shelled. This latter is a defence which protects the egg if the host detects the fraud.

The intruded egg develops exceptionally quickly; when the newly-hatched Cuckoo is only ten hours old, and still blind, it exhibits an urge to eject the other eggs or nestlings. It rolls them into a special depression on its back and heaves them out of the nest. The Cuckoo nestling is apparently able to pressure the host adults for feeding by mimicking the cries of the host nestlings. The diversity of the Cuckoo's eggs is extraordinary, the forms resembling those of its most usual hosts. In Britain these are:
  • Meadow Pipit
    Meadow Pipit

    The Meadow Pipit or Titlark, Anthus pratensis, is a small passerine bird which breeds in much of the northern half of Europe and Asia. It is bird migration over most of its range, wintering in southern Europe, north Africa and southern Asia, but is resident in Ireland, Great Britain, and neighbouring coastal areas of western Europe....
     (Anthus pratensis): brown eggs speckled with darker brown.
  • European Robin
    European Robin

    The European Robin , or, in Anglophone Europe, simply Robin, is a small insectivorous passerine bird that was formerly classed as a member of the Thrush family , but is now considered to be an Old World flycatcher ....
     (Erithacus rubecula): whitish-grey eggs speckled with bright red.
  • Reed warbler
    Reed Warbler

    The Eurasian Reed Warbler, or just Reed Warbler, Acrocephalus scirpaceus, is an Old World warbler in the genus Acrocephalus. It breeds across Europe into temperate western Asia....
     (Acrocephalus scirpensis): light dull green eggs blotched with olive.
  • Redstart
    Redstart

    Redstarts are a group of small Old World birds. They were formerly classified in the thrush family , but are more often now treated as part of the Old World flycatcher family ....
     (Phoenicurus phoenicurus): clear blue eggs.
  • Hedge Sparrow (Prunella modularis): clear blue eggs, unmarked, not mimicked. This bird is an uncritical fosterer; it tolerates in its nest eggs that do not resemble its own.


Each female Cuckoo lays one type only; the same type laid by her mother. In this way female Cuckoos are divided into groups (known as gentes
Gentes

The term Gentes can mean:* Gentes is the plural form of gens in Latin* Gens are the polymorphism of host-specific brood parasites that specialize in certain hosts....
, singular "gens"), each parasitises the host to which it is adapted. The male Cuckoo has its own territory, and mates with females from any gens; thus the population (all gentes) is interbreeding.

The standard explanation of how the inheritance of gens works is as follows. The egg colour is inherited by sex chromosome. In birds sex determination is ZZ/ZW, and unlike mammals, the heterogametic sex is the female. The determining gene (or super-gene) for the inheritance of egg colour is believed to be carried on the W chromosome. The W chromosome, of course, is directly transmitted in the female line. The female behaviour in choosing the host species is set by imprinting
Imprinting (psychology)

Imprinting is the term used in psychology and ethology to describe any kind of phase-sensitive learning that is rapid and apparently independent of the consequences of behavior....
 after birth, a common mechanism in bird behaviour.

Ecologically, the system of multiple hosts protects host species from a critical reduction in numbers, and maximises the egg-laying capacity of the population of Cuckoos. There are some other advantages, too: it extends the range of habitats where the Cuckoo eggs may be raised successfully. Detailed work on the Cuckoo started with Chance in 1922 and continues to the present day; in particular, the inheritance of gens is still a live issue.

Grove snail
The Grove Snail, Cepaea nemoralis, is famous for the rich polymorphism of its shell. The system is controlled by a series of multiple alleles. The shell colour series is brown (genetically the top dominant trait), dark pink, light pink, very pale pink, dark yellow and light yellow (the bottom or universal recessive trait). Bands may be present or absent; and if present from one to five in number. Unbanded is the top dominant trait, and the forms of banding are controlled by modifier genes (see epistasis
Epistasis

Epistasis is the interaction between genes. Epistasis takes place when the action of one gene is modified by one or several other genes, which are sometimes called modifier genes....
).

In England the snail is regularly predated by the Song Thrush
Song Thrush

The Song Thrush is a Thrush that breeds across much of Eurasia. It is also known in English language dialects as throstle or mavis....
 Turdus philomelos, which breaks them open on thrush anvils (large stones). Here fragments accumulate, permitting researchers to analyse the snails taken. The thrushes hunt by sight, and capture selectively those forms which match the habitat least well. Snail colonies are found in woodland, hedgerows and grassland, and the predation determines the proportion of phenotypes (morphs) found in each colony.

Cepaea Nemoralis Active Pair On Tree Trunk
A second kind of selection also operates on the snail, whereby certain heterozygotes have a physiological advantage over the homozygotes. In addition, apostatic selection is likely, with the birds preferentially taking the most common morph. This is the 'search pattern' effect, where a predominantly visual predator persists in targeting the morph which gave a good result, even though other morphs are available.

Despite the predation, the polymorphism survives in almost all habitats, though the proportions of morphs varies considerably. The alleles controlling the polymorphism form a super-gene with linkage so close as to be nearly absolute. This control saves the population from a high proportion of undesirable recombinants, and it is hypothesised that selection has brought the loci concerned together.

To sum up, in this species predation by birds appears to be the main (but not the only) selective force driving the polymorphism. The snails live on heterogenous backgrounds, and thrush are adept at detecting poor matches. The inheritance of physiological and cryptic diversity is preserved also by heterozygous advantage in the super-gene. Recent work has included the effect of shell colour on thermoregulation, and a wider selection of possible genetic influences is considered by Cook.

A similar system of genetic polymorphism occurs in the White-lipped Snail Cepaea hortensis, a close relative of the Grove Snail. In Iceland, where there are no song thrushes, a correlation has been established between temperature and colour forms. Banded and brown morphs reach higher temperatures than unbanded and yellow snails. This may be the basis of the physiological selection found in both species of snail.

Scarlet Tiger Moth
The Scarlet Tiger Moth
Scarlet tiger moth

The Scarlet Tiger Moth is a colorful moth of Europe and western and central Asia . It belongs to the tiger moth family, Arctiidae.The caterpillars feed mostly on comfrey ....
 Callimorpha (Panaxia) dominula (family Arctiidae
Arctiidae

Arctiidae is a large and diverse family of moths with around 11,000 species found all over the world, with 6,000 Neotropical species . This family includes the groups commonly known as tiger moths , which usually have bright colours, footmen , lichen moths and wasp moths....
) occurs in continental Europe, western Asia and southern England. It is a day-flying moth, noxious-tasting, with brilliant warning colour in flight, but cryptic at rest. The moth is colonial in habit, and prefers marshy ground or hedgerows. The preferred food of the larvae is the herb Comfrey
Comfrey

For the place, see Comfrey, MinnesotaComfrey is an important herb in organic gardening, having many medicinal and fertilizer uses....
 (Symphytum officinale). In England it has one generation per year.

Scarlet Tiger Moth
The moth is known to be polymorphic in its colony at Cothill, about five miles (8 km) from Oxford
Oxford

Oxford is a City status in the United Kingdom, and the county town of Oxfordshire, in South East England. It has a population of 151,000. The rivers River Cherwell and River Thames run through Oxford and meet south of the city centre....
, with three forms: the typical homozygote; the rare homozygote (bimacula) and the heterozygote (medionigra). It was studied there by E.B. Ford
E.B. Ford

Edmund Brisco "Henry" Ford, Fellow of the Royal Society, Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians was a United Kingdom ecological genetics. He was a leader among those British biologists who investigated the role of natural selection in nature....
, and later by P.M. Sheppard
Philip Sheppard

Professor Philip MacDonald Sheppard, Royal Society was a United Kingdom geneticist and lepidopterist. He made advances in ecological genetics and population genetics in lepidoptera, pulmonate land snails and humans....
 and their co-workers over many years. Data is available from 1939 to the present day, got by the usual field method of capture-mark-release-recapture and by genetic analysis from breeding in captivity. The records cover gene frequency and population-size for much of the twentieth century.

In this instance the genetics appears to be simple: two alleles at a single locus
Locus (genetics)

In the fields of genetics and evolutionary computation, a locus is a fixed position on a chromosome such as the position of a genetic marker that may be occupied by one or more genes....
, producing the three phenotypes. Total captures over 26 years 1939-64 came to 15,784 homozygous dominula (ie typica), 1,221 heterozygous medionigra and 28 homozygous bimacula. Now, assuming equal viability of the genotypes 1,209 heterozygotes would be expected, so the field results do not suggest any heterozygous advantage. It was Sheppard who found that the polymorphism is maintained by selective mating: each genotype preferentially mates with other morphs. This is sufficient to maintain the system despite the fact that in this case the heterozygote has slightly lower viability.

Peppered Moth
The Peppered Moth, Biston betularia, is justly famous as an example of a population responding in a heritable way to a significant change in their ecological circumstances. E.B. Ford described it as "one of the most striking, though not the most profound, evolutionary changes ever actually witnessed in nature".

Although the moths are cryptically camouflage
Camouflage

Camouflage is a method of cryptic or concealing coloration that allows an otherwise visible organism or object to remain invisibility through deception....
d and rest during the day in unexposed positions on trees, they are predated by birds hunting by sight. The original camouflage (or crypsis
Crypsis

File:Agama aculeata.jpgIn ecology, crypsis is the ability of an organism to avoid observation. A form of antipredator adaptation, methods range from camouflage, nocturnality, wiktionary:subterranean lifestyle, Transparency , or Batesian mimicry....
) seems near-perfect against a background of lichen
Lichen

Lichens are composite organisms consisting of a symbiosis association of a fungus with a Photosynthesis partner , usually either a green algae or Cyanobacteria ....
 growing on trees. The sudden growth of industrial pollution in the nineteenth century changed the effectiveness of the moths' camouflage: the trees became blackened by soot, and the lichen died off. In 1848 a dark version of this moth was found in the Manchester
Manchester

Manchester is a city and metropolitan borough of Greater Manchester, England. Manchester was granted City status in the United Kingdom in 1853....
 area. By 1895 98% of the Peppered Moths in this area were black. This was a rapid change for a species that has only one generation a year.

Biston
Biston
In Europe, there are three morphs: the typical white morph (betularia or typica), and carbonaria, the melanic black morph. They are controlled by alleles at one locus
Locus

The word locus is Latin for "place". It can mean:...
, with the carbonaria being dominant. There is also an intermediate or semi-melanic morph insularia, controlled by other alleles (see Majerus 1998).

A key fact, not realised initially, is the advantage of the heterozygotes, which survive better than either of the homozygotes. This affects the caterpillars as well as the moths, in spite of the caterpillars being monomorphic in appearance (they are twig mimics). In practice heterozygote advantage
Heterozygote advantage

A heterozygote advantage describes the case in which the Zygosity genotype has a higher relative fitness than either the Zygosity dominant gene or homozygote recessive gene genotype....
 puts a limit to the effect of selection, since neither homozygote can reach 100% of the population. For this reason, it is likely that the carbonaria allele was in the population originally, pre-industrialisation, at a low level. With the recent reduction in pollution, the balance between the forms has already shifted back significantly.

Another interesting feature is that the carbonaria had noticeably darkened after about a century. This was seen quite clearly when specimens collected about 1880 were compared with specimens collected more recently: clearly the dark morph has been adjusted by the strong selection acting on the gene complex. This might happen if a more extreme allele was available at the same locus; or genes at other loci might act as modifiers. We do not, of course, know anything about the genetics of the original melanics from the nineteenth century.

This type of industrial melanism has only affected such moths as obtain protection from insect-eating birds by resting on trees where they are concealed by an accurate resemblance to their background (over 100 species of moth in Britain with melanic forms were known by 1980). No species which hide during the day, for instance, among dead leaves, is affected, nor has the melanic change been observed among butterflies.

This is, as advertised in many textbooks, 'evolution in action'. Much of the work was done by Bernard Kettlewell
Bernard Kettlewell

Henry Bernard Davis Kettlewell was a United Kingdom geneticist, lepidopterist and medical doctor, who carried out important research into the influence of industrial melanism on natural selection in moths, showing why moths are darker in polluted areas....
, whose methods came under scrutiny later on. The entomologist Michael Majerus
Michael Majerus

Professor Michael E. N. Majerus was a geneticist and Professor of Ecology at the University of Cambridge, an enthusiast who became a world authority in his field of evolutionary biology....
 discussed criticisms made of Kettlewell's experimental methods in his 1998 book Melanism: Evolution in Action
Melanism: Evolution in Action

Melanism: Evolution in Action is a book by Dr Mike Majerus, published in 1998. It is an update of Bernard Kettlewell's book The Evolution of Melanism....
. This book was misrepresented in some reviews, and the story picked up by creationist
Creationism

Creationism is the religious belief that humanity, life, the Earth, and the universe were Creation myth in their original form by a deity or deities....
 campaigners. In her controversial book Of Moths and Men
Of Moths and Men

Of Moths and Men is a controversial book by the journalist Judith Hooper about the Oxford University ecological genetics school led by E.B. Ford....
, Judith Hooper
Judith Hooper

Judith Hooper is an American journalist.Hooper has worked as an editor and writer for the magazine Omni . With her husband, Dick Teresi, she co-wrote the books The Three-Pound Universe and Would the Buddha Wear a Walkman? A Catalogue of Revolutionary Tools for Higher Consciousness ....
 (2002) implied that Kettlewell's work was fraudulent or incompetent. Careful studies of Kettlewell's surviving papers by Rudge (2005) and Young (2004) found that Hooper's allegation of fraud was unjustified, and that "Hooper does not provide one shred of evidence to support this serious allegation”. Majerus himself described Of Moths and Men
Of Moths and Men

Of Moths and Men is a controversial book by the journalist Judith Hooper about the Oxford University ecological genetics school led by E.B. Ford....
 as "littered with errors, misrepresentations, misinterpretations and falsehoods".. A suitably restrained summary of latest opinion mostly favours predation as the main selective force.

Conclusion: The Peppered Moth is a valid example of natural selection
Natural selection

Natural selection is the process by which favorable heritable trait become more common in successive generations of a population of Reproduction organisms, and unfavorable heritable traits become less common, due to differential reproduction of genotypes....
 and adaptation
Adaptation

Adaptation is the process, which takes place under natural selection, whereby an organism becomes better suited to its habitat. Also, the term may refer to some characteristic which stands out as being especially significant in the organism's survival....
. It illustrates a polymorphic species maintaining adaptation to a varied and sometimes changing environment.

Two-spotted lady beetle


Adalia bipunctata, the two-spotted ladybird, is highly polymorphic. Its basic form is red with two black spots, but it has many other forms, the most important being melanic, with black elytra and red spots. The curious fact about this morphism is that, although the melanic forms are more common in industrial areas, its maintenance has nothing to do with cryptic camouflage and predation. The Coccinellidae
Coccinellidae

Coccinellidae is a family of beetles, known variously as ladybirds , ladybugs or lady beetles . Lesser-used names include ladyclock, lady cow, and lady fly....
 as a whole are highly noxious, and experiments with birds and other predators have have found this species quite exceptionally distasteful. Therefore, their colour is warning (aposematic) colouration, and all the morphs are quite conspicuous against green vegetation. The field studies identify differing proportions of morphs at different times of year and in different places, which indicates a high level of selection. However, the basis of that selection is still not known for sure, though many theories have been proposed. Since all the morphs are aposematically coloured, it seems unlikely that the difference between the colour of morphs is directly under selection. Perhaps pleiotropic effects of the genes acting on colour also affect the beetle's physiology, and hence its relative fitness.

Ants
Ant
Ant

Ants are Eusociality insects of the family Formicidae, and along with the related wasps and bees, they belong to the order Hymenoptera. Ants evolution from wasp-like ancestors in the mid-Cretaceous period between 110 and 130 million years ago and Evolutionary radiation after the rise of flowering plants....
s exhibit a range of polymorphisms. First, there is their characteristic haplodiploid sex determination system, whereby all males are haploid, and all females diploid. Second, there is differentiation between both the females and males based mostly on feeding of larvae, which determines, for example, whether the imago is capable of reproduction. Lastly, there is differentiation of size and 'duties' (particularly of females), which are usually controlled by feeding and/or age, but which may sometimes be genetically controlled. Thus the order exhibits both genetic polymorphism and extensive polyphenism.

Hoverfly polymorphism

Hoverfly mimics can be seen in almost any garden in the temperate zone. The Syrphidae are a large (5600+ species) family of flies; their imagos feed on nectar and pollen, and are well-known for their mimicry of social hymenoptera
Hymenoptera

Hymenoptera is one of the larger order s of insects, comprising the sawfly, wasps, bees, and ants. The name refers to the membranous wings of the insects, and is derived from the Ancient Greek language wikt:???? : membrane and wikt:pte??? : wing....
. The mimicry is Batesian in nature: hoverflies are palatable but hymenoptera are generally unpalatable and may also be protected by stings and/or armour.

Many social wasp species (Vespidae) exhibit Mullerian mimicry, where a group of unpalatable species benefit from sharing the same kind of warning (aposematic) colouration. Wasps are decidedly noxious: nasty-tasting and with a painful sting. They form a Mullerian 'ring' of similarly coloured models; the wasps are often accompanied by clusters of hover-fly mimics, who tend to arrive at the flowers at a similar time of day, and whose flight pattern is passably similar to wasp flight.

Observers in a garden can see for themselves that hoverfly mimics are quite common, usually many times more common than the models, and are (to our sight) relatively poor mimics, often easy to distinguish from real wasps. However, it has been established in other cases that imperfect mimicry can confer significant advantage to the mimic, especially if the model is really noxious. Also, not only is polymorphism absent from these mimics, it is absent in the wasps also: these facts are presumably connected.

The situation with bumblebees (Bombus) is rather different. They too are unpalatable, in the sense of being difficult to eat: their body is covered with setae (pile) and is armoured; they are sometimes described as being 'non-food'. Mostler in 1935 carried out tests of their palatability: with the exception of specialist bee-eaters, adults of 19 species of birds ate only 2% of 646 bumblebees presented to them. After various trials, Mostler attributed their avoidance mainly to mechanical difficulties in handling: one young bird took 18 minutes to subdue, kill and eat a bumblebee.

Bumblebees form Mullerian rings of species, and they do often exhibit polymorphism. The hoverfly species mimicking bumblebees are generally accurate mimics, and many of their species are polymorphic. Many of the polymorphisms are different between the sexes, for example by the mimicry being limited to one sex only.

The question is, how can the differences between social wasp mimics and bumblebee mimics be explained? Evidently if model species are common, and have overlapping distributions, they are less likely to be polymorphic. Their mimics are widespread and develop a kind of rough and ready jack-of-all-trades mimicry. But if model species are less common and have patchy distribution they develop polymorphism; and their mimics match them more exactly and are polymorphic also. The issues are currently being investigated.

Chromosome polymorphism in Drosophila

In the 1930s Dobzhansky and his co-workers collected Drosophila pseudoobscura
Drosophila pseudoobscura

Drosophila pseudoobscura is a species of Drosophilidae, used extensively in lab studies of speciation.In 2005, D. pseudoobscura was the second Drosophila species to have its genome sequenced, after the model organism Drosophila melanogaster....
 and D. persimilis from wild populations in California
California

California is a U.S. state on the West Coast of the United States of the United States, along the Pacific Ocean. It is bordered by Oregon to the north, Nevada to the east, Arizona to the southeast, and to the south the Mexico state of Baja California....
 and neighbouring states. Using Painter's technique they studied the polytene chromosomes and discovered that the wild populations were polymorphic for chromosomal inversions. All the flies look alike whatever inversions they carry: this is an example of a cryptic polymorphism. Accordingly, Dobzhansky favoured the idea that the morphs became fixed in the population by means of Sewall Wright
Sewall Wright

Sewall Green Wright was an American geneticist known for his influential work on evolutionary theory and also for his work on path analysis . With R....
's drift
Genetic drift

Genetic drift or allelic drift is the change in the relative frequency with which a gene variant occurs in a population that results from the fact that alleles in offspring are a Sampling of those in the parents, and because of the role of chance in determining whether a given individual survives and reproduces....
. However, evidence rapidly accumulated to show that natural selection was responsible:

1. Values for heterozygote inversions of the third chromosome were often much higher than they should be under the null assumption: if no advantage for any form the number of heterozygotes should conform to Ns (number in sample) = p2+2pq+q2 where 2pq is the number of heterozygotes (see Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium).

2. Using a method invented by L'Heretier and Teissier, Dobzhansky bred populations in population cages, which enabled feeding, breeding and sampling whilst preventing escape. This had the benefit of eliminating migration as a possible explanation of the results. Stocks containing inversions at a known initial frequency can be maintained in controlled conditions. It was found that the various chromosome types do not fluctuate at random, as they would if selectively neutral, but adjust to certain frequencies at which they become stabilised. With D. persimilis he found that the caged population followed the values expected on the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium when conditions were optimal (which disproved any idea of non-random mating), but with a restricted food supply heterozygotes had a distinct advantage.

3. Different proportions of chromosome morphs were found in different areas. There is, for example, a polymorph-ratio cline
Cline

Cline can refer to:*Term meaning "gradual change" ** Cline , a gradual change of a character or feature in a species over a geographical area....
  in D. robusta along an transect near Gatlinburg
Gatlinburg, Tennessee

Gatlinburg is a city in Sevier County, Tennessee, Tennessee, United States. As of the 2000 U.S. Census, Gatlinburg had a population of 3,828. The city is a popular vacation resort, as it rests on the border of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park along U.S....
, TN
Tennessee

Tennessee is a U.S. state located in the Southern United States United States. In 1796, it became the sixteenth state to join the United States....
 passing from to 4,000 feet. Also, the same areas sampled at different times of year yielded significant differences in the proportions of forms. This indicates a regular cycle of changes which adjust the population to the seasonal conditions. For these results selection is by far the most likely explanation.

4. Lastly, morphs cannot be maintained at the high levels found simply by mutation, nor is drift a possible explanation when population numbers are high.

By the time Dobzhansky published the third edition of his book in 1951 he was persuaded that the chromosome morphs were being maintained in the population by the selective advantage of the heterozygotes, as with most polymorphisms. Later he made yet another interesting discovery. One of the inversions, known as PP, was quite rare up to 1946, but by 1958 its proportion had risen to 8%. Not only that, but the proportion was similar over an area of some in California. This cannot have happened by migration of PP morphs from, say, Mexico (where the inversion is common) because the rate of dispersal (at less than 2km/year) is of the wrong order. The change therefore reflected a change in prevailing selection whose basis was not yet known.

Chromosomal polymorphism in general
In 1973, M.J.D. White, then at the end of a long career investigating karyotypes, gave an interesting summary of the distribution of chromosome polymorphism.

"It is extremely difficult to get an adequate idea as to what fraction of the species of eukaryote
Eukaryote

Animals, plants, fungus, and protists are eukaryotes , organisms whose Cell are organized into complex structures enclosed within Cell membrane....
 organisms actually are polymorphic for structural rearrangements of the chromosomes. In Dipterous flies with polytene chromosomes... the figure is somewhere between 60 and 80 percent... In grasshopper
Grasshopper

Grasshoppers are insects of the suborder Caelifera in the order Orthoptera. To distinguish them from Tettigoniidae, they are sometimes referred to as short-horned grasshoppers....
s pericentric inversion
Chromosomal inversion

An inversion is a chromosome rearrangement in which a segment of a chromosome is reversed end to end. An inversion occurs when a single chromosome undergoes breakage and rearrangement within itself....
 polymorphism is shown by only a small number of species. But in this group polymorphism for super-numerary chromosomes and chromosome regions is very strongly developed in many species."


"It is clear that the nature of natural populations is a very complicated subject, and it now appears probable that annidation (adaptation of the various genotypes to different ecological niches) and frequency-dependent selection are at least as important, and probably more important in many cases, than simple heterosis
Heterosis

Heterosis is a term used in genetics and selective breeding. The term heterosis, also known as hybrid vigour or outbreeding enhancement, describes the increased strength of different characteristics in Hybrid ; the possibility to obtain a genetically superior individual by combining the virtues of its parents....
 (in the sense of increased viability or fecundity of the heterozygote)."


This suggests, once again, that polymorphism is a common and important aspect of adaptive evolution in natural populations.

Heterostyly

An example of a botanical genetic polymorphism is heterostyly
Heterostyly

Heterostyly is a unique form of polymorphism and herkogamy in flowers. In a heterostylous species, two or three different morphological types of flowers, termed morphs, exist in the population....
, in which flowers occur in different forms with different arrangements of the pistil
Flower

A flower, sometimes known as a bloom or blossom, is the reproduction structure found in flowering plants . The biological function of a flower is to mediate the union of male sperm with female ovum in order to produce seeds....
 and the stamen
Flower

A flower, sometimes known as a bloom or blossom, is the reproduction structure found in flowering plants . The biological function of a flower is to mediate the union of male sperm with female ovum in order to produce seeds....
s. The system is called heteromorphic self-incompatibility
Self-incompatibility in plants

Self-incompatibility is a general name for several genetic mechanisms in angiosperms, which prevent self-fertilization and thus encourage outcrossing....
, and the general 'strategy' of stamens separated from pistils is known as herkogamy
Herkogamy

Herkogamy is a common strategy employed by hermaphroditic angiosperms to reduce sexual interference between male and female function. Herkogamy differs from other such strategies by supplying a spatial separation of the anthers and stigma....
.

Pin and thrum heterostyly occurs in dimorphic species of Primula
Primula

Primula is a genus of 400?500 species of low-growing herbs in the family Primulaceae. They include Primula vulgaris, Primula auricula, Primula veris and Primula elatior....
, such as Primula vulgaris
Primula vulgaris

Primula vulgaris is a species of Primula native to western and southern Europe , northwest Africa , and southwest Asia . The common name is primrose, or occasionally common primrose or English primrose to distinguish it from other Primula species also called primroses....
. There are two types of flower. The pin flower has a long style bearing the stigma at the mouth and the stamens half-way down; and the thrum flower has a short style, so the stigma is half-way up the tube and the stamens are at the mouth. So when an insect in search of nectar inserts its proboscis into a long-style flower, the pollen from the stamens stick to the proboscis in exactly the part that will later touch the stigma of the short-styled flower, and vice versa.

Another most important property of the heterostyly system is physiological. If thrum pollen is placed on a thrum stigma, or pin pollen on a pin stigma, the reproductive cells are incompatible and relatively little seed is set. Effectively, this ensures out-crossing, as described by Darwin.
Quite a lot is now known about the underlying genetics; the system is controlled by a set of closely linked genes which act as a single unit, a super-gene. All sections of the genus Primula have heterostyle species, altogether 354 species out of 419. Since heterostyly is characteristic of nearly all races or species, the system is at least as old as the genus.


Between 1861 and 1863 Darwin found the same kind of structure in other groups: flax
Flax

Flax is a member of the genus Linum in the family Linaceae. It is native to the region extending from the eastern Mediterranean region to India and was probably first domesticated in the Fertile Crescent....
 (and other species of Linum
Linum

Linum is a genus of about 200 species of flowering plants in the family Linaceae, native to temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere. Among many other species, it includes the flax , the bast fibre of which is used to produce linen and the seeds to produce linseed oil....
); and in purple loosestrife
Purple loosestrife

Lythrum salicaria is a flowering plant belonging to the family Lythraceae, native to Europe, Asia, northwest Africa, and southeastern Australia....
 and other species of Lythrum
Lythrum

Lythrum is a genus commonly known as loosestrife. It is one of 32 genera of the family Lythraceae.Lythrum species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Pavonia pavonia, Engrailed , Hebrew Character and V-pug....
. Some of the Lythrum species are trimorphic, with one style and two stamens in each form.

Heterostyly is known in at least 51 genera of 18 families of Angiosperms.

Darwin's finches
Whereas Darwin
Charles Darwin

Charles Robert Darwin Royal Society was an English people natural history who realised and presented compelling evidence that all species of life have evolution over time from common descent, through the process he called natural selection....
 spent just five weeks in the Galápagos, and David Lack
David Lack

David Lambert Lack Royal Society, was a United Kingdom evolutionary biologist who made contributions to ornithology, ecology and ethology. His book on the finches of the Galapagos Islands was a landmark work....
 spent three months, Peter and Rosemary Grant
Peter and Rosemary Grant

Peter R. Grant and B. Rosemary Grant, a married couple, are both United Kingdom Evolutionary biology at Princeton University. They are noted for their work on Darwin's Finches on the Galapagos Island named Daphne Major....
 and their colleagues have made research trips to the Galápagos for about thirty years, particularly studying Darwin's finches. Here we look briefly at the case of the large cactus finch Geospiza conirostris on Isla Genovesa (formerly Tower Island) which is formed from a shield volcano, and is home to a variety of birds. These birds, like all well-studied groups, show various kinds of morphism.

Males are dimorphic in song type: songs A and B are quite distinct. Also, males with song A have shorter bills than B males. This is also a clear difference. With these beaks males are able to feed differently on their favourite cactus, the prickly pear Opuntia
Opuntia

Opuntia, also known as nopales , or Paddle Cactus from the resemblance to the ball-and-paddle toy, is a genus in the cactus family , Cactaceae....
. Those with long beaks are able to punch holes in the cactus fruit and eat the fleshy aril
Aril

An aril is any specialized outgrowth from the funiculus that covers or is attached to the seed. It is sometimes applied to any appendage or thickening of the seed coat in flowering plants, such as the edible parts of the mangosteen and pomegranate fruit, or the mace of the nutmeg seed....
 pulp which surrounds the seeds, whereas those with shorter beaks tear apart the cactus base and eat the pulp and any insect larvae and pupae (both groups eat flowers and buds). This dimorphism clearly maximises their feeding opportunities during the non-breeding season when food is scarce.

Territories of type A and type B males are random if not mated but alternate if mated: no two breeding males of the same song type shared a common boundary. This initially suggested the possibility of assortative mating
Assortative mating

Assortative mating takes place when sexual reproduction organisms tend to mating with individuals that are like themselves in some respect or dissimilar ....
 by female choice. However, further work showed that "the choice of a male by a female is independent of any conditioning influence of her father's song type If the population is panmixic
Panmixia

A panmictic population is one where all individuals are potential partners. This assumes that there are no mating restrictions, neither Genetics or behavioural, upon the population, and that therefore all recombination is possible....
, then Geospiza conirostris exhibits a balanced genetic polymorphism and not, as originally supposed, a case of nascent sympatric speciation
Sympatric speciation

Sympatric and sympatry are terms from biogeography, referring to organisms whose ranges overlap or are even identical, so that they occur together at least in some places....
. The selection maintaining the polymorphism maximises the species' niche by expanded its feeding opportunity. The genetics of this situation cannot be clarified in the absence of a detailed breeding program, but two loci with linkage disequilibrium
Linkage disequilibrium

In population genetics, linkage disequilibrium is the non-random association of alleles at two or more locus , not necessarily on the same chromosome....
 is a possibility.

Another interesting dimorphism is for the bills of young finches, which are either 'pink' or 'yellow'. All species of Darwin's finches exhibit this morphism, which lasts for two months. No interpretation of this phenomenon is known.

Relative frequency


Endler's survey of natural selection gave an indication of the relative importance of polymorphisms among studies showing natural selection. The following is a precis of key points:

  • Number of species demonstrating natural selection: 141
    Number showing quantitative traits: 56
    Number showing polymorphic traits: 62
    Number showing both Q and P traits: 23


This summary shows that polymorphisms are found to be at least as common as continuous variation in studies of natural selection, and hence just as likely to be part of the evolutionary process.

See also


  • CEPH
    CEPH

    Centre d'Etude du Polymorphisme Humain , now called the Fondation Jean Dausset-CEPH, is an international genetic research center located in Paris, France....
  • Single nucleotide polymorphism
    Single nucleotide polymorphism

    A single-nucleotide polymorphism is a DNA sequence variation occurring when a single nucleotide — adenine, thymine, cytosine, or guanine — in the genome differs between members of a species ....