Data from: Phenotypic evolution shaped by current enzyme function in the bioluminescent courtship signals of sea fireflies
Mating behaviours are diverse and noteworthy, especially within species radiations where they may contribute to speciation. Studying how differences in mating behaviours arise between species can help us understand how diversity is generated at multiple biological levels. The bioluminescent courtshi...
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Zusammenfassung: | Mating behaviours are diverse and noteworthy, especially within species
radiations where they may contribute to speciation. Studying how
differences in mating behaviours arise between species can help us
understand how diversity is generated at multiple biological levels. The
bioluminescent courtship displays of cypridinid ostracods (or sea
fireflies) are an excellent system for this since amazing variety evolves
while using a conserved biochemical mechanism. We find that the evolution
of one aspect in this behavioural phenotype - the duration of
bioluminescent courtship pulses - is shaped by biochemical function.
First, by measuring light production from induced bioluminescence in 38
species, we discovered differences between species in their biochemical
reactions. Then, for 16 species of which biochemical, phylogenetic, and
behavioral data are all available, we used phylogenetic comparative models
to show that differences in biochemical reaction are nonlinearly
correlated with the duration of courtship pulses. This relationship
indicates that changes to both enzyme (c-luciferase) function and usage
have shaped the evolution of courtship displays, but that they
differentially contribute to these phenotypic changes. This nonlinear
dynamic may have consequences for the disparity of signaling phenotypes
observed across species, and demonstrates how unappreciated diversity at
the biochemical level can lead to inferences about behavioural evolution. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1fq675j |