Experimental Evidence of an Eco-evolutionary Feedback during Adaptive Divergence

Differences in how organisms modify their environment can evolve rapidly and might influence adaptive population divergence [1, 2]. In a common garden experiment in aquatic mesocosms, we found that adult stickleback from a recently diverged pair of lake and stream populations had contrasting effects...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current biology 2016-02, Vol.26 (4), p.483-489
Hauptverfasser: Matthews, Blake, Aebischer, Thierry, Sullam, Karen E., Lundsgaard-Hansen, Bänz, Seehausen, Ole
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Differences in how organisms modify their environment can evolve rapidly and might influence adaptive population divergence [1, 2]. In a common garden experiment in aquatic mesocosms, we found that adult stickleback from a recently diverged pair of lake and stream populations had contrasting effects on ecosystem metrics. These modifications were caused by both genetic and plastic differences between populations and were sometimes comparable in magnitude to those caused by the presence/absence of stickleback. Lake and stream fish differentially affected the biomass of zooplankton and phytoplankton, the concentration of phosphorus, and the abundance of several prey (e.g., copepods) and non-prey (e.g., cyanobacteria) species. The adult-mediated effects on mesocosm ecosystems influenced the survival and growth of a subsequent generation of juvenile stickleback reared in the same mesocosms. The prior presence of adults decreased the overall growth rate of juveniles, and the prior presence of stream adults lowered overall juvenile survival. Among the survivors, lake juveniles grew faster than co-occurring stream juveniles, except in mesocosm ecosystems previously modified by adult lake fish that were reared on plankton. Overall, our results provide evidence for reciprocal interactions between ecosystem dynamics and evolutionary change (i.e., eco-evolutionary feedbacks) in the early stages of adaptive population divergence. •The ecosystem effects of organisms can evolve rapidly•Ecosystem modifications by organisms can persist across generations•Adults can influence selection pressures on juveniles via habitat modification•Eco-evolutionary feedbacks may occur during adaptive divergence between populations The traits governing how organisms modify their environments can evolve rapidly during adaptation. In an experiment, Matthews et al. found that stickleback-mediated modifications on their aquatic environment influenced selection pressures on a subsequent generation. This suggests feedbacks between ecosystem modification and evolutionary change.
ISSN:0960-9822
1879-0445
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2015.11.070