Data from: Disruptive selection and the evolution of discrete color morphs in Timema stick insects
A major unresolved issue in biology is why phenotypic and genetic variation is sometimes continuous, yet other times packaged into discrete units of diversity, such as morphs, ecotypes, and species. In theory, ecological discontinuities can impose strong disruptive selection that promotes the evolut...
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Zusammenfassung: | A major unresolved issue in biology is why phenotypic and genetic
variation is sometimes continuous, yet other times packaged into discrete
units of diversity, such as morphs, ecotypes, and species. In theory,
ecological discontinuities can impose strong disruptive selection that
promotes the evolution of discrete forms, but direct tests of this
hypothesis are lacking. Here we show that Timema stick insects exhibit
genetically-determined color morphs that range from weakly to strongly
discontinuous. Color data from nature and a manipulative field experiment
demonstrate that greater morph differentiation is associated with shifts
from host plants exhibiting more continuous color variation to those
exhibiting greater coloration distance between green leaves and brown
stems, the latter of which generates strong disruptive selection. Our
results show how ecological factors can promote discrete variation, and we
further present results on how this can have variable effects on the
genetic differentiation that promotes speciation. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.95x69p8pv |