Jamieson C. Gorrell
University of Alberta
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Featured researches published by Jamieson C. Gorrell.
Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2012
Ryan W. Taylor; Adrienne K. Boon; Ben Dantzer; Denis Réale; Murray M. Humphries; Stan Boutin; Jamieson C. Gorrell; David W. Coltman; Andrew G. McAdam
Consistent individual differences in behaviour, and behavioural correlations within and across contexts, are referred to as animal personalities. These patterns of variation have been identified in many animal taxa and are likely to have important ecological and evolutionary consequences. Despite their importance, genetic and environmental sources of variation in personalities have rarely been characterized in wild populations. We used a Bayesian animal model approach to estimate genetic parameters for aggression, activity and docility in North American red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus). We found support for low heritabilities (0.08–0.12), and cohort effects (0.07–0.09), as well as low to moderate maternal effects (0.07–0.15) and permanent environmental effects (0.08–0.16). Finally, we found evidence of a substantial positive genetic correlation (0.68) and maternal effects correlation (0.58) between activity and aggression providing evidence of genetically based behavioural correlations in red squirrels. These results provide evidence for the presence of heritable variation in red squirrel behaviour, but also emphasize the role of other sources of variation, including maternal effects, in shaping patterns of variation and covariation in behavioural traits.
Nature Communications | 2010
Jamieson C. Gorrell; Andrew G. McAdam; David W. Coltman; Murray M. Humphries; Stan Boutin
Orphaned animals benefit from being adopted, but it is unclear why an adopting parent should incur the costs of rearing extra young. Such altruistic parental behaviour could be favoured if it is directed towards kin and the inclusive benefits of adoption exceed the costs. Here, we report the occurrence of adoption (five occurrences among 2,230 litters over 19 years) in asocial red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus). Adoptions were always between kin, while orphans without nearby kin were never adopted. Adoptions were confined exclusively to circumstances in which the benefits to the adopted juvenile (b), discounted by the degree of relatedness between the surrogate and the orphan (r), exceeded the fitness costs of adding an extra juvenile to her litter (c), as predicted by Hamiltons rule (rb>c) for the evolution of altruism. By focusing on adoption in an asocial species, our study provides a clear test of Hamiltons rule that explains the persistence of occasional altruism in a natural mammal population.
Biology Letters | 2011
S. Eryn McFarlane; Jeffrey E. Lane; Ryan W. Taylor; Jamieson C. Gorrell; David W. Coltman; Murray M. Humphries; Stan Boutin; Andrew G. McAdam
The tendency of females to mate with multiple males is often explained by direct and indirect benefits that could outweigh the many potential costs of multiple mating. However, behaviour can only evolve in response to costs and benefits if there is sufficient genetic variation on which selection can act. We followed 108 mating chases of 85 North American red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) during 4 years, to measure each females degree of multiple male mating (MMM), and used an animal model analysis of our multi-generational pedigree to provide what we believe is the first estimate of the heritability of MMM in the wild. Female red squirrels were highly polyandrous, mating with an average of 7.0 ± 0.2 males on their day of oestrus. Although we found evidence for moderate levels of additive genetic variation (CVA = 5.1), environmental variation was very high (CVE = 32.3), which resulted in a very low heritability estimate (h2 < 0.01). So, while there is genetic variation in this trait, the large environmental variation suggests that any costs or benefits associated with differences among females in MMM are primarily owing to environmental and not genetic differences, which could constrain the evolutionary response to natural selection on this trait.
Ecology and Evolution | 2014
S. Eryn McFarlane; Jamieson C. Gorrell; David W. Coltman; Murray M. Humphries; Stan Boutin; Andrew G. McAdam
A trait must genetically correlate with fitness in order to evolve in response to natural selection, but theory suggests that strong directional selection should erode additive genetic variance in fitness and limit future evolutionary potential. Balancing selection has been proposed as a mechanism that could maintain genetic variance if fitness components trade off with one another and has been invoked to account for empirical observations of higher levels of additive genetic variance in fitness components than would be expected from mutation–selection balance. Here, we used a long-term study of an individually marked population of North American red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) to look for evidence of (1) additive genetic variance in lifetime reproductive success and (2) fitness trade-offs between fitness components, such as male and female fitness or fitness in high- and low-resource environments. “Animal model” analyses of a multigenerational pedigree revealed modest maternal effects on fitness, but very low levels of additive genetic variance in lifetime reproductive success overall as well as fitness measures within each sex and environment. It therefore appears that there are very low levels of direct genetic variance in fitness and fitness components in red squirrels to facilitate contemporary adaptation in this population.
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 2011
Shirley Raveh; Dik Heg; Vincent A. Viblanc; David W. Coltman; Jamieson C. Gorrell; F. Stephen Dobson; Adele Balmer; Peter Neuhaus
In polyandrous and polygynandrous species where females mate with multiple partners, males are expected to maximize their fitness by exhibiting an array of reproductive behaviors to ensure fertilization success, such as competing for the best mating order within a mating sequence, optimizing their investment in copulation, and mate guarding. Though there is genetic evidence of a first-male precedence in siring success for many mammalian species, the causes of this effect are poorly understood. We studied influences on first-male precedence in Columbian ground squirrels (Urocitellus columbianus). We found that the time a male spent consorting and mate guarding declined with his mating order (both the highest for the first male to mate). Mate guarding by the first male significantly reduced, but did not exclude, the number of additional males a female accepted. Later mating males reduced the time spent consorting, suggesting a perceived decreased chance of fertilization success. Consortship and mate guarding durations were positively related to the male’s siring success and to each other, suggesting that males adjusted these behaviors strategically to increase their chances of fertilization success. Our results suggest that besides being the first male to consort, first-male sperm precedence is further enhanced through longer mating bouts and by suppressing the chances and/or efforts of later mating males.
Animal Behaviour | 2011
Shirley Raveh; Dik Heg; F. Stephen Dobson; David W. Coltman; Jamieson C. Gorrell; Adele Balmer; Simon Röösli; Peter Neuhaus
Parasites can negatively affect their host’s physiology and morphology and render host individuals less attractive as mating partners. The energetic requirements of defending against parasites have to be traded off against other needs such as feeding activity, territoriality, thermoregulation or reproduction. Parasites can affect mating patterns, with females preferentially mating with parasite-resistant or parasite-free partners. We tested experimentally whether removal of both ectoparasites and endoparasites on free-living, male Columbian ground squirrels, Urocitellus columbianus, affected male mating behaviour, reproductive success and seasonal and posthibernation weight gain compared to control males. We predicted that experimental males would lose less body mass and mate more often than control males. In addition, we predicted experimental males would copulate earlier than control males in the mating sequences of receptive females and sire more offspring, because this species exhibits a strong first-male paternity advantage. Parasite treatment significantly reduced the parasite loads of experimental males. None of these males had ectoparasites at the end of the season, compared to 70% infestation of the control males. However, contrary to our expectations, the experimental treatment did not affect male reproductive behaviour (mating frequency, mating position, consort duration and mate-guarding duration), did not increase male reproductive success, and did not influence male body mass. We conclude that parasite infestation plays a minor role in affecting male reproductive behaviour, maybe because of the overall low infestation rates. Alternatively, males may be able to compensate for any costs associated with moderate loads of parasites.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Biological Sciences | 2015
S. Eryn McFarlane; Jamieson C. Gorrell; David W. Coltman; Murray M. Humphries; Stan Boutin; Andrew G. McAdam
Genetic variation in fitness is required for the adaptive evolution of any trait but natural selection is thought to erode genetic variance in fitness. This paradox has motivated the search for mechanisms that might maintain a populations adaptive potential. Mothers make many contributions to the attributes of their developing offspring and these maternal effects can influence responses to natural selection if maternal effects are themselves heritable. Maternal genetic effects (MGEs) on fitness might, therefore, represent an underappreciated source of adaptive potential in wild populations. Here we used two decades of data from a pedigreed wild population of North American red squirrels to show that MGEs on offspring fitness increased the populations evolvability by over two orders of magnitude relative to expectations from direct genetic effects alone. MGEs are predicted to maintain more variation than direct genetic effects in the face of selection, but we also found evidence of maternal effect trade-offs. Mothers that raised high-fitness offspring in one environment raised low-fitness offspring in another environment. Such a fitness trade-off is expected to maintain maternal genetic variation in fitness, which provided additional capacity for adaptive evolution beyond that provided by direct genetic effects on fitness.
Journal of Heredity | 2011
Sophie Laurence; David W. Coltman; Jamieson C. Gorrell; Albrecht I. Schulte-Hostedde
Extrinsic factors such as physical barriers play an important role in shaping population genetic structure. A reduction in gene flow leading to population structuring may ultimately lead to population divergence. These divergent populations are often considered subspecies. Because genetic differentiation may represent differences between subspecies, patterns of genetic structure should reflect subspecies groupings. In this study, we examine the contemporary population genetic structure of muskrat (n = 331) and assess the relevance of 4 geographically distinct subspecies designations across northern North America using 9 microsatellite loci. We predicted that patterns of gene flow and genetic structure would reflect the described subspecies. We found evidence of genetic differentiation between western and eastern regions, and muskrats from Newfoundland (NF) showed significantly lower genetic diversity than central regions. A strong isolation by distance pattern was also detected within the eastern cluster. Our results did not differentiate Ondatra zibethicus spatulus (northwest) from O. z. albus (central), but they suggest a distinction between O. z. obscurus (NF) and O. z. zibethicus (east). This study highlights the need for more phylogenetic studies in order to better understand intraspecific divergence and the genetic characterization of subspecies.
Heredity | 2016
Jasmine K. Janes; A D Roe; A V Rice; Jamieson C. Gorrell; David W. Coltman; D W Langor; Felix A. H. Sperling
An understanding of mating systems and fine-scale spatial genetic structure is required to effectively manage forest pest species such as Dendroctonus ponderosae (mountain pine beetle). Here we used genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphisms to assess the fine-scale genetic structure and mating system of D. ponderosae collected from a single stand in Alberta, Canada. Fine-scale spatial genetic structure was absent within the stand and the majority of genetic variation was best explained at the individual level. Relatedness estimates support previous reports of pre-emergence mating. Parentage assignment tests indicate that a polygamous mating system better explains the relationships among individuals within a gallery than the previously reported female monogamous/male polygynous system. Furthermore, there is some evidence to suggest that females may exploit the galleries of other females, at least under epidemic conditions. Our results suggest that current management models are likely to be effective across large geographic areas based on the absence of fine-scale genetic structure.
Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2015
Jeffrey E. Lane; Andrew G. McAdam; Anne Charmantier; Murray M. Humphries; David W. Coltman; Q. Fletcher; Jamieson C. Gorrell; Stan Boutin
Most empirical attempts to explain the evolution of parental care have focused on its costs and benefits (i.e. fitness consequences). In contrast, few investigations have been made of the other necessary prerequisite for evolutionary change, inheritance. Here, we examine the fitness consequences and heritability (h2) of a post‐weaning parental care behaviour (territory bequeathal) in a wild population of North American red squirrels. Each year, a subset (average across all years = 19%) of reproductive females bequeathed their territory to a dependent offspring. Bequeathing females experienced higher annual reproductive success and did not suffer a survival cost to themselves relative to those females retaining their territory. Bequeathing females thus realized higher relative annual fitness [ω = 1.18 ± 0.03 (SE)] than nonbequeathing females [ω = 0.96 ± 0.02 (SE)]. Additive genetic influences on bequeathal behaviour, however, were not significantly different from 0 (h2 = 1.9 × 10−3; 95% highest posterior density interval = 3.04 × 10−8 to 0.37) and, in fact, bequeathal behaviour was not significantly repeatable (R = 2.0 × 10−3; 95% HPD interval =0–0.27). In contrast, directional environmental influences were apparent. Females were more likely to bequeath in years following low food abundance and when food availability in the upcoming autumn was high. Despite an evident fitness benefit, a lack of heritable genetic variance will constrain evolution of this trait.