10.6084/m9.figshare.4205760.v1 Bradly Alicea Bradly Alicea Supplemental-File-1 from Evolution in eggs and phases: experimental evolution of fecundity and reproductive timing in <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i> The Royal Society 2016 experimental evolution evolution of development reproductive dynamics 2016-11-04 10:54:53 Dataset https://rs.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Supplemental-File-1_from_Evolution_in_eggs_and_phases_experimental_evolution_of_fecundity_and_reproductive_timing_in_i_Caenorhabditis_elegans_i_/4205760 To examine the role of natural selection on fecundity in a variety of Caenorhabditis elegans genetic backgrounds, we used an experimental evolution protocol to evolve 14 distinct genetic strains over 15-20 generations. We were able to generate 790 distinct genealogies, which provided information on both the effects of natural selection and the evolvability of each strain. Among these genotypes are a wild-type (N2) and a collection of mutants with targeted mutations in the daf-c, daf-d and AMPK pathways. Differences are observed in reproductive fitness along with related changes in reproductive timing. The majority of selective effects on fecundity occur during the first few generations of evolution, while the negative selection for reproductive timing occurs on longer time scales. In addition, positive selection on fecundity results in positive and negative strain-dependent selection on reproductive timing. A derivative of population size per generation called reproductive carry-over (RCO) may be informative in terms of developmental selection. While these findings transcend mutations in a specific gene, changes in the RCO measure may nevertheless be products of selection. In conclusion, the broader implications of these findings are discussed, particularly in the context of genotype-fitness maps and the role of uncharacterized mutations in individual variation and evolvability.