Data from: Phenotypic integration in the feeding system of the eastern diamondback rattlesnake (Crotalus adamanteus)
Selection can vary geographically across environments and temporally over the lifetime of an individual. Unlike geographic contexts, where different selective regimes can act on different alleles, age-specific selection is constrained to act on the same genome by altering age-specific expression. Sn...
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Zusammenfassung: | Selection can vary geographically across environments and temporally over
the lifetime of an individual. Unlike geographic contexts, where different
selective regimes can act on different alleles, age-specific selection is
constrained to act on the same genome by altering age-specific expression.
Snake venoms are exceptional traits for studying ontogeny because toxin
expression variation directly changes the phenotype; relative amounts of
venom components determine, in part, venom efficacy. Phenotypic
integration is the dependent relationship between different traits that
collectively produce a complex phenotype and, in venomous snakes, may
include traits as diverse as venom, head shape and fang length. We
examined the feeding system of the eastern diamondback rattlesnake
(Crotalus adamanteus) across environments and over the lifetime of
individuals and used a genotype–phenotype map approach, protein expression
data and morphological data to demonstrate that: (i) ontogenetic effects
explained more of the variation in toxin expression variation than
geographic effects, (ii) both juveniles and adults varied geographically,
(iii) toxin expression variation was a result of directional selection and
(iv) different venom phenotypes covaried with morphological traits also
associated with feeding in temporal (ontogenetic) and geographic
(functional) contexts. These data are the first to demonstrate, to our
knowledge, phenotypic integration between multiple morphological
characters and a biochemical phenotype across populations and age classes.
We identified copy number variation as the mechanism driving the
difference in the venom phenotype associated with these morphological
differences, and the parallel mitochondrial, venom and morphological
divergence between northern and southern clades suggests that each clade
may warrant classification as a separate evolutionarily significant unit. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.4mt34 |