Taking Quantitative Genomics into the Wild
Susan E. Johnston, Nancy Chen, Emily B. Josephs

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in wild quantitative genomics, emphasizing how genomic technologies have expanded our understanding of phenotypic diversity, heritability, and evolutionary potential in natural populations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of recent developments and future directions in applying genomic tools to study quantitative traits in wild populations.
Findings
Genomic technologies enable detailed study of trait heritability in the wild.
Recent studies uncover genetic bases of fitness-related traits.
Advances facilitate understanding of evolutionary dynamics in natural environments.
Abstract
A key goal in studies of ecology and evolution is understanding the causes of phenotypic diversity in nature. Most traits of interest, such as those relating to morphology, life-history, immunity and behaviour are quantitative, and phenotypic variation is driven by the cumulative effects of genetic and environmental variation. The field of quantitative genetics aims to quantify the additive genetic component of this trait variance (i.e. the "heritability"), often with the underlying assumption that trait variance is driven by many loci of infinitesimal effects throughout the genome. This approach allows us to understand the evolutionary potential of natural populations and can be extended to examine the genetic covariation with fitness to predict responses to selection. Therefore, quantitative genetic studies are fundamental to understanding evolution in the wild. Over the last two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetic and phenotypic traits in livestock · Genetic Mapping and Diversity in Plants and Animals · Genetic diversity and population structure
