Non-additive genetic effects induce novel phenotypic distributions in male mating traits of F1 hybrids

Keisuke Atsumi, Malgorzata Lagisz & Shinichi Nakagawa
Hybridization is a source of phenotypic novelty and variation because of increased additive genetic variation. Yet, the roles of non-additive allelic interactions in shaping phenotypic mean and variance of hybrids have been underappreciated. Here we examine the distributions of male-mating traits in F1 hybrids via a meta-analysis of 3,208 effect sizes from 39 animal species pairs. Although additivity sets phenotypic distributions of F1s to be intermediate, F1s also showed recessivity and resemblance to maternal species....
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