dc.identifier.citation | Bonnet , T , Morrissey , M B , de Villemereuil , P , Alberts , S C , Arcese , P , Bailey , L D , Boutin , S , Brekke , P , Brent , L J N , Camenisch , G , Charmantier , A , Clutton-Brock , T H , Cockburn , A , Coltman , D W , Courtiol , A , Davidian , E , Evans , S R , Ewen , J G , Festa-Bianchet , M , de Franceschi , C , Gustafsson , L , Höner , O P , Houslay , T M , Keller , L F , Manser , M , McAdam , A G , McLean , E , Nietlisbach , P , Osmond , H L , Pemberton , J M , Postma , E , Reid , J M , Rutschmann , A , Santure , A W , Sheldon , B C , Slate , J , Teplitsky , C , Visser , M E , Wachter , B & Kruuk , L E B 2022 , ' Genetic variance in fitness indicates rapid contemporary adaptive evolution in wild animals ' , Science , vol. 376 , no. 6596 , pp. 1012-1016 . https://doi.org/10.1126/science.abk0853 | en |
dc.description | Acknowledgements We acknowledge the people, organizations, and traditional owners on whose land the study populations were monitored. We also thank numerous fieldworkers and funding bodies; see supplementary text S10 for full acknowledgments related to each study. This work was supported by computational resources provided by the Australian government through the National Computational Infrastructure (NCI) under the ANU Merit Allocation Scheme. We thank A. E. Latimer for graphic design, L.-M. Chevin and J. Hadfield for suggestions on early versions of this work, and B. Walsh and three anonymous reviewers for comments on the manuscript. Funding The long-term studies presented here were funded as follows (see details in supplementary text S10). Montpellier and Corsica blue tits: Observatoire de Recherche Montpelliérain de l’Environnement (OSU-OREME), Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR), European Research Council (ERC); Hoge Veluwe great tits: the NIOO-KNAW, ERC, and numerous funding agencies; Wytham great tits: Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, ERC, and the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC); Mandarte song sparrows: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Swiss National Science Foundation, ERC, Norwegian Research Council; Gotland collared flycatchers: Swedish Research Council (VR) and Swedish Research Council for Environment, Agricultural Sciences and Spatial Planning (FORMAS); Hihi: the New Zealand Department of Conservation (DoC), the Hihi Recovery Group, Zealandia, Research England, Royal Society of New Zealand; Canberra superb fairy-wrens: the Australian Research Council (ARC); Amboseli baboons: the US National Science Foundation, the US National Institute on Aging, the Princeton Center for the Demography of Aging, the Chicago Zoological Society, the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, the L.S.B. Leakey Foundation, and the National Geographic Society; Cayo Santiago macaques: the National Center for Research Resources and the Office of Research Infrastructure Programs of the National Institutes of Health; Graubünden Snow voles: the Swiss National Science Foundation; Kluane red squirrels: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) and the National Science Foundation (NSF); Ram Mountain bighorn sheep: NSERC; The Isle of Rum red deer and St Kilda Soay sheep: NERC; Kalahari meerkats: ERC, Human Frontier Science Program, the University of Zurich, the Swiss National Science Foundation, MAVA Foundation, the Mammal Research Institute at the University of Pretoria, South Africa; Ngorongoro spotted hyenas: the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, the Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst, the Max Planck Society, the Werner Dessauer Stiftung. | en |