Evolutionary family planning: life-history experiments in a natural population

What determines the timing and characteristics of major life events, such as sexual maturation, reproductive investment, and the onset of senescence?  Because these types of traits, or life-history parameters, are key determinants of fitness, evolutionary theory has long proposed that, to the extent that these traits are heritable, they should manifest as adaptations to the particular environments and ecologies of natural populations.  Further, changes in a natural population's environment should result in life-history evolution whenever altered timing or qualities of life-history parameters can increase fitness.  Reznick et al. set out in the 1970s to test these predictions in a natural fish population by transplanting a subpopulation to a section of stream with a very different predation regime, one in which changes in the timing of maturation and reproduction should have been adaptive.  Their 11-year field experiment provided the first solid experimental evidence of life-history evolution in nature.

The paper:
More:
Another great story of evolution in this system: Endler 1982
Reznick lab website

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