This is thought to be the most common mechanism of action for natural selection because most traits do not appear to change drastically over time.
[4] This means that most common phenotype in the population is selected for and continues to dominate in future generations.
In order for a population to adapt to changing environmental conditions they must have enough genetic diversity to select for new traits as they become favorable.
The fourth type of data is DNA sequences from the genes contributing to observes phenotypic differences.
They can involve studying the changes that causes natural selection in the mean and variance of the trait, or measuring fitness for a range of different phenotypes under natural conditions and examining the relationship between these fitness measurements and the trait value, but analysis and interpretation of the results is not straightforward.
However, most quantitative traits (height, birthweight, schizophrenia) are thought to be under stabilizing selection, due to their polygenicity and the distribution of the phenotypes throughout human populations.