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» » » » » Study captures one of the clearest pictures yet of evolution in vertebrates


What do you get when you put together several tons of steel plates, hundreds of mice, a few evolutionary and molecular biologists and a tiny Nebraska town near the South Dakota border? Would you believe one of the most complete pictures ever of vertebrate evolution?

Study captures one of the clearest pictures yet of evolution in vertebrates
Credit: McGill University
Led by Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and Molecular and Cellular Biology Hopi Hoekstra, a team of international researchers conducted a years-long study in which hundreds of mice were released into massive, custom-built outdoor enclosures to track how light- and dark-colored mice survived in light- and dark-colored habitats.

The results not only confirmed the intuition that light-colored mice survive better in light-colored habitats, and vice versa for dark-colored mice, but also allowed researchers to pinpoint a mutation related to survival, specifically that affects pigmentation, and understand exactly how the mutation produced a novel coat color. The study is described in a paper published in Science.

"This project has been many years in the making, and part of the inspiration for it came from the experimental evolution studies people have been doing for many years now using microbes in the lab," Hoekstra said. "The idea has been that you start with a particular population, genotype it, and then give it environmental challenges and watch how the population evolves over generations. Then you genotype it at the end and you can see, at the genetic level, what changes.

"We were interested in replicating that approach but doing it in vertebrates, and doing it in a natural environment," she continued. "And letting them evolve in habitats that -- importantly -- are open to predators, or at least visually hunting, avian predators."


To do it, then postdoctoral fellow Rowan Barrett (now a faculty at McGill University) and colleagues traveled to the tiny town of Valentine, Nebraska in order to take advantage of an important natural habitat -- the Sand Hills.

As early as the 1930s, Hoekstra said, it had been observed that mice living in the sand hills -- a large area of contiguous sand dunes with sandy, light-colored soil -- are lighter in color than those living in the surrounding areas with dark, loamy soil.

To understand what underlies those differences, Hoekstra, Barrett and colleagues came up with an ambitious plan to build a series of eight enclosures -- each 2,500-meters-square, or just over a half-acre -- four on the light-colored sand hills and four on the darker soil.

They then "seeded" each enclosure with 100 mice -- half trapped from the sand hills and half trapped from the surrounding dark soil -- after marking each with a tiny, embedded RFID tag and taking the very tip of their tails for genetic sequencing. Three months later, researchers returned and set to identify which of the mice survived.

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