Fitness surfaces can link conservation programs to the populations they
support and improve our ability to augment populations in a changing
environment
- Drew Sauve
, - Hana Thompson,
- Amy Chabot,
- Denis Réale
Abstract
Fitness surfaces offer a valuable tool for bridging the gap between
captive breeding programs and wild populations. By quantifying the
relationship between individual phenotypes for a trait and their
reproductive success in captive and wild settings, fitness surfaces can
help identify the impacts of captive selection and phenotypic
plasticity. Measuring fitness surfaces in captive and wild populations
would allow us to predict the success of reintroduction efforts and help
inform the selection of release candidates. Overall, the inclusion of
fitness surface estimates into conservation breeding programs increases
the effectiveness of reintroduction efforts and should help improve our
understanding of evolution at the interface of human management and
wildlife populations.02 Feb 2025Submitted to Molecular Ecology 04 Feb 2025Submission Checks Completed
04 Feb 2025Assigned to Editor
04 Feb 2025Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
04 Feb 2025Reviewer(s) Assigned