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1 October 2000 EVALUATION OF SELECTION ON CLIFF SWALLOWS
Trevor D. Price, Charles R. Brown, Mary Bomberger Brown
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Abstract

Estimates of the intensity of selection based on measurements of the living and the dead require knowledge of the fraction of the original population dying. We apply recently developed methods (Blanckenhorn et al. 1999) to estimate the intensity of selection in a population of cliff swallows. In this population the fraction of individuals dying was unknown, but certainly high. The inferred selection is very strong and impossible to achieve if the original population is assumed to have followed a normal distribution. We consider several alternative explanations for this result including measurement biases, undetected immigration, and sampling biases. Of these, sampling biases are perhaps the most likely. We conclude that the intensity of selection on the swallows was probably strong, but its absolute magnitude is unknown.

Corresponding Editor: D. Roff

Trevor D. Price, Charles R. Brown, and Mary Bomberger Brown "EVALUATION OF SELECTION ON CLIFF SWALLOWS," Evolution 54(5), 1824-1827, (1 October 2000). https://doi.org/10.1554/0014-3820(2000)054[1824:EOSOCS]2.0.CO;2
Received: 21 February 2000; Accepted: 1 April 2000; Published: 1 October 2000
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KEYWORDS
Cliff swallows
mortality
NATURAL SELECTION
selection index
selection intensity
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