Intraspecific eye color variability in birds and mammals: a recent evolutionary event exclusive to humans and domestic animals

Abstract Background Human populations and breeds of domestic animals are composed of individuals with a multiplicity of eye (= iris) colorations. Some wild birds and mammals may have intraspecific eye color variability, but this variation seems to be due to the developmental stage of the individual,...

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Main Authors: Juan J. Negro, M. Carmen Blázquez, Ismael Galván
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Zoology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12983-017-0243-8
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spelling doaj-3f6ca7ff3f8f42848b848c02f56f95d52020-11-24T21:45:10ZengBMCFrontiers in Zoology1742-99942017-12-011411610.1186/s12983-017-0243-8Intraspecific eye color variability in birds and mammals: a recent evolutionary event exclusive to humans and domestic animalsJuan J. Negro0M. Carmen Blázquez1Ismael Galván2Estación Biológica de Doñana (CSIC)Estación Biológica de Doñana (CSIC)Estación Biológica de Doñana (CSIC)Abstract Background Human populations and breeds of domestic animals are composed of individuals with a multiplicity of eye (= iris) colorations. Some wild birds and mammals may have intraspecific eye color variability, but this variation seems to be due to the developmental stage of the individual, its breeding status, and/or sexual dimorphism. In other words, eye colour tends to be a species-specific trait in wild animals, and the exceptions are species in which individuals of the same age group or gender all develop the same eye colour. Domestic animals, by definition, include bird and mammal species artificially selected by humans in the last few thousand years. Humans themselves may have acquired a diverse palette of eye colors, likewise in recent evolutionary time, in the Mesolithic or in the Upper Paleolithic. Presentation of the hypothesis We posit two previously unrecognized hypotheses regarding eye color variation: 1) eye coloration in wild animals of every species tends to be a fixed trait. 2) Humans and domestic animal populations, on the contrary, have eyes of multiple colors. Sexual selection has been invoked for eye color variation in humans, but this selection mode does not easily apply in domestic animals, where matings are controlled by the human breeder. Testing the hypothesis Eye coloration is polygenic in humans. We wish to investigate the genetics of eye color in other animals, as well as the ecological correlates. Implications of the hypothesis Investigating the origin and function of eye colors will shed light on the reason why some species may have either light-colored irises (e.g., white, yellow or light blue) or dark ones (dark red, brown or black). The causes behind the vast array of eye colors across taxa have never been thoroughly investigated, but it may well be that all Darwinian selection processes are at work: sexual selection in humans, artificial selection for domestic animals, and natural selection (mainly) for wild animals.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12983-017-0243-8Eye colorationIrisDomesticationSexual dichromatismOCA2 gene
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juan J. Negro
M. Carmen Blázquez
Ismael Galván
spellingShingle Juan J. Negro
M. Carmen Blázquez
Ismael Galván
Intraspecific eye color variability in birds and mammals: a recent evolutionary event exclusive to humans and domestic animals
Frontiers in Zoology
Eye coloration
Iris
Domestication
Sexual dichromatism
OCA2 gene
author_facet Juan J. Negro
M. Carmen Blázquez
Ismael Galván
author_sort Juan J. Negro
title Intraspecific eye color variability in birds and mammals: a recent evolutionary event exclusive to humans and domestic animals
title_short Intraspecific eye color variability in birds and mammals: a recent evolutionary event exclusive to humans and domestic animals
title_full Intraspecific eye color variability in birds and mammals: a recent evolutionary event exclusive to humans and domestic animals
title_fullStr Intraspecific eye color variability in birds and mammals: a recent evolutionary event exclusive to humans and domestic animals
title_full_unstemmed Intraspecific eye color variability in birds and mammals: a recent evolutionary event exclusive to humans and domestic animals
title_sort intraspecific eye color variability in birds and mammals: a recent evolutionary event exclusive to humans and domestic animals
publisher BMC
series Frontiers in Zoology
issn 1742-9994
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Abstract Background Human populations and breeds of domestic animals are composed of individuals with a multiplicity of eye (= iris) colorations. Some wild birds and mammals may have intraspecific eye color variability, but this variation seems to be due to the developmental stage of the individual, its breeding status, and/or sexual dimorphism. In other words, eye colour tends to be a species-specific trait in wild animals, and the exceptions are species in which individuals of the same age group or gender all develop the same eye colour. Domestic animals, by definition, include bird and mammal species artificially selected by humans in the last few thousand years. Humans themselves may have acquired a diverse palette of eye colors, likewise in recent evolutionary time, in the Mesolithic or in the Upper Paleolithic. Presentation of the hypothesis We posit two previously unrecognized hypotheses regarding eye color variation: 1) eye coloration in wild animals of every species tends to be a fixed trait. 2) Humans and domestic animal populations, on the contrary, have eyes of multiple colors. Sexual selection has been invoked for eye color variation in humans, but this selection mode does not easily apply in domestic animals, where matings are controlled by the human breeder. Testing the hypothesis Eye coloration is polygenic in humans. We wish to investigate the genetics of eye color in other animals, as well as the ecological correlates. Implications of the hypothesis Investigating the origin and function of eye colors will shed light on the reason why some species may have either light-colored irises (e.g., white, yellow or light blue) or dark ones (dark red, brown or black). The causes behind the vast array of eye colors across taxa have never been thoroughly investigated, but it may well be that all Darwinian selection processes are at work: sexual selection in humans, artificial selection for domestic animals, and natural selection (mainly) for wild animals.
topic Eye coloration
Iris
Domestication
Sexual dichromatism
OCA2 gene
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12983-017-0243-8
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