Experimental tests of evolution in the lab and field

http://biology.mcgill.ca/faculty/fussmann/trinidad.html
In evolutionary biology, we often have to let nature do our experiments for us because evolution is thought to act over time scales too large to observe in the confines of an experiment, especially in vertebrates.  However, John Endler changed that idea with his work on guppies in the streams of Trinidad.  There, guppy coloration patterns are subject to sexual selection via mating preferences and natural selection via predation.  Along the streams, waterfalls divide different pools, and those pools have different levels of predation on guppies.  Endler took advantage of this natural experimental setup and transplanted guppies from higher predation pools to lower predation pools to test predictions about the evolution of their coloration under different selective regimes.  He was able to confirm his hypothesis that under lower predation, guppy coloration would evolve away from crypsis (advantageous under high predation) to more complex and colorful patterns (advantageous for mating).

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