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Field-based insights to the evolution of specialization: plasticity and fitness across habitats in a specialist/generalist species pair

Factors promoting the evolution of specialists versus generalists have been little studied in ecological context. In a large-scale comparative field experiment, we studied genotypes from naturally evolved populations of a closely related generalist/specialist species pair (Polygonum persicaria and P...

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Autores principales: Griffith, Timothy, Sultan, Sonia E
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3399200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22837826
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.202
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author Griffith, Timothy
Sultan, Sonia E
author_facet Griffith, Timothy
Sultan, Sonia E
author_sort Griffith, Timothy
collection PubMed
description Factors promoting the evolution of specialists versus generalists have been little studied in ecological context. In a large-scale comparative field experiment, we studied genotypes from naturally evolved populations of a closely related generalist/specialist species pair (Polygonum persicaria and P. hydropiper), reciprocally transplanting replicates of multiple lines into open and partially shaded sites where the species naturally co-occur. We measured relative fitness, individual plasticity, herbivory, and genetic variance expressed in the contrasting light habitats at both low and high densities. Fitness data confirmed that the putative specialist out-performed the generalist in only one environment, the favorable full sun/low-density environment to which it is largely restricted in nature, while the generalist had higher lifetime reproduction in both canopy and dense neighbor shade. The generalist, P. persicaria, also expressed greater adaptive plasticity for biomass allocation and leaf size in shaded conditions than the specialist. We found no evidence that the ecological specialization of P. hydropiper reflects either genetically based fitness trade-offs or maintenance costs of plasticity, two types of genetic constraint often invoked to prevent the evolution of broadly adaptive genotypes. However, the patterns of fitness variance and herbivore damage revealed how release from herbivory in a new range can cause an introduced species to evolve as a specialist in that range, a surprising finding with important implications for invasion biology. Patterns of fitness variance between and within sites are also consistent with a possible role for the process of mutation accumulation (in this case, mutations affecting shade-expressed phenotypes) in the evolution and/or maintenance of specialization in P. hydropiper.
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spelling pubmed-33992002012-07-26 Field-based insights to the evolution of specialization: plasticity and fitness across habitats in a specialist/generalist species pair Griffith, Timothy Sultan, Sonia E Ecol Evol Original Research Factors promoting the evolution of specialists versus generalists have been little studied in ecological context. In a large-scale comparative field experiment, we studied genotypes from naturally evolved populations of a closely related generalist/specialist species pair (Polygonum persicaria and P. hydropiper), reciprocally transplanting replicates of multiple lines into open and partially shaded sites where the species naturally co-occur. We measured relative fitness, individual plasticity, herbivory, and genetic variance expressed in the contrasting light habitats at both low and high densities. Fitness data confirmed that the putative specialist out-performed the generalist in only one environment, the favorable full sun/low-density environment to which it is largely restricted in nature, while the generalist had higher lifetime reproduction in both canopy and dense neighbor shade. The generalist, P. persicaria, also expressed greater adaptive plasticity for biomass allocation and leaf size in shaded conditions than the specialist. We found no evidence that the ecological specialization of P. hydropiper reflects either genetically based fitness trade-offs or maintenance costs of plasticity, two types of genetic constraint often invoked to prevent the evolution of broadly adaptive genotypes. However, the patterns of fitness variance and herbivore damage revealed how release from herbivory in a new range can cause an introduced species to evolve as a specialist in that range, a surprising finding with important implications for invasion biology. Patterns of fitness variance between and within sites are also consistent with a possible role for the process of mutation accumulation (in this case, mutations affecting shade-expressed phenotypes) in the evolution and/or maintenance of specialization in P. hydropiper. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2012-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3399200/ /pubmed/22837826 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.202 Text en © 2012 The Authors. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Original Research
Griffith, Timothy
Sultan, Sonia E
Field-based insights to the evolution of specialization: plasticity and fitness across habitats in a specialist/generalist species pair
title Field-based insights to the evolution of specialization: plasticity and fitness across habitats in a specialist/generalist species pair
title_full Field-based insights to the evolution of specialization: plasticity and fitness across habitats in a specialist/generalist species pair
title_fullStr Field-based insights to the evolution of specialization: plasticity and fitness across habitats in a specialist/generalist species pair
title_full_unstemmed Field-based insights to the evolution of specialization: plasticity and fitness across habitats in a specialist/generalist species pair
title_short Field-based insights to the evolution of specialization: plasticity and fitness across habitats in a specialist/generalist species pair
title_sort field-based insights to the evolution of specialization: plasticity and fitness across habitats in a specialist/generalist species pair
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3399200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22837826
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.202
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