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Selection

This article does not citeany references or sources. (November 2006)
Please help improve this articleby adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiablematerial may be challenged and removed. It has been suggested that Evolutionary pressurebe mergedinto this article or section. (Discuss) For other uses, see Selection (disambiguation). Part of the Biologyseries on EvolutionMechanisms and processes

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Biology Portal· v • d • e 

In the context of evolution, certain traits or alleles of a species may be subject to selection. Under selection, individuals with advantageous or "adaptive" traits tend to be more successful than their peers reproductively--meaning they contribute more offspring to the succeeding generation than others do. When these traits have a genetic basis, selection can increase the prevalence of those traits, because offspring will inherit those traits from their parents. When selection is intense and persistent, adaptive traits become universal to the population or species, which may then be said to have evolved.

Contents

Overview

Whether or not selection takes place depends on the conditions in which the individuals of a species find themselves. Adults, juveniles, embryos, and even eggs and sperm may undergo selection. Factors fostering selection include limits on resources (nourishment, habitat space, mates) and the existence of threats (predators, disease, adverse weather). Biologists often refer to such factors as selective pressures.

Natural selection is the most familiar type of selection by name. The breeding of dogs, cows and horses, however, represents "artificial selection." Subcategories of natural selection are also sometimes distinguished. These include sexual selection, ecological selection, stabilizing selection, disruptive selection and directional selection (more on these below).

Selection occurs only when the individuals of a population are diverse in their characteristics--or more specifically when the traits of individuals differ with respect to how well they equip them to survive or exploit a particular pressure. In the absence of individual variation, or when variations are selectively neutral, selection does not occur.

Meanwhile, selection does not guarantee that advantageous traits or alleles will become prevalent within a population. Through genetic drift, such traits may become less common or disappear. In the face of selection even a so-called deleterious allele may become universal to the members of a species. This is a risk primarily in the case of "weak" selection (e.g. an infectious disease with only a low mortality rate) or small populations.

Though deleterious alleles may sometimes become established, selection may act "negatively" as well as "positively." Negative selection decreases the prevalence of traits that diminish individuals' capacity to succeed reproductively (i.e. their fitness), while positive selection increases the prevalence of adaptive traits.

In biological discussions, traits subject to negative selection are sometimes said to be "selected against," while those under positive selection are said to be "selected for," as in the sentence Desert conditions select for drought tolerance in plants and select against shallow root architectures.

Types and subtypes

Selection is hierachically classified into natural and artificial selection. Natural selection is further subclassified into ecological and sexual selection

Patterns of selection

Aspects of selection may be divided into effects on a phenotype and their causes. The effects are called patterns of selection, and do not necessarily result from particular causes (mechanisms); in fact each pattern can arise from a number of different mechanisms. Stabilizing selection favors individuals with intermediate characteristics while its opposite, disruptive selection, favors those with extreme characteristics; directional selection occurs when characteristics lie along a phenotypic spectrum and the individuals at one end are more successful; and balancing selection is a pattern in which multiple characteristics may be favored.

Mechanisms of selection

Distinct from patterns of selection are mechanisms of selection; for example, disruptive selection often is the result of disassortative sexual selection, and balancing selection may result from frequency-dependent selection and overdominance.

Further reading

v • d • eTopics in population geneticsKey concepts Hardy-Weinberg law · Genetic linkage · Linkage disequilibrium · Fisher's fundamental theorem · Neutral theory · Price equationSelection Natural · Sexual · Artificial · EcologicalEffects of selection
on genomic variation Genetic hitchhiking · Background selectionGenetic driftSmall population size · Population bottleneck · Founder effect · CoalescenceFounders R.A. Fisher · J. B. S. Haldane · Sewall WrightRelated topics Evolution · Microevolution · Evolutionary game theory · Fitness landscape · Genetic genealogyList of evolutionary biology topics Categories: Evolutionary biology | Population genetics | SelectionHidden categories: Articles lacking sources from November 2006 | All articles lacking sources | Articles to be merged since September 2007

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