Adaptation reduces competitive dominance and alters community assembly

A growing body of theory predicts that evolution of an early-arriving species in a new environment can produce a competitive advantage against later arriving species, therefore altering community assembly (i.e. the community monopolization hypothesis). Applications of the community monopolization hy...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2021-02, Vol.288 (1945), p.20203133-20203133
Hauptverfasser: Nadeau, Christopher P, Farkas, Timothy E, Makkay, Andrea M, Papke, R Thane, Urban, Mark C
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container_end_page 20203133
container_issue 1945
container_start_page 20203133
container_title Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences
container_volume 288
creator Nadeau, Christopher P
Farkas, Timothy E
Makkay, Andrea M
Papke, R Thane
Urban, Mark C
description A growing body of theory predicts that evolution of an early-arriving species in a new environment can produce a competitive advantage against later arriving species, therefore altering community assembly (i.e. the community monopolization hypothesis). Applications of the community monopolization hypothesis are increasing. However, experimental tests of the hypothesis are rare. Here, we provide a rare experimental demonstration of the community monopolization hypothesis using two archaeal species. We first expose one species to low- and high-temperature environments for 135 days. Populations in the high-temperature treatment evolved a 20% higher median performance when grown at high temperature. We then demonstrate that early arrival and adaptation reduce the abundance of a late-arriving species in the high-temperature environment by 63% relative to when both species arrive simultaneously and neither species is adapted to high temperature. These results are consistent with the community monopolization hypothesis and suggest that adaptation can reduce competitive dominance to alter community assembly. Hence, community monopolization might be much more common in nature than previously assumed. Our results strongly support the idea that patterns of biodiversity might often stem from a race between local adaptation and colonization of pre-adapted species.
doi_str_mv 10.1098/rspb.2020.3133
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subjects Acclimatization
Adaptation, Physiological
Biodiversity
Biological Evolution
Ecology
Ecosystem
title Adaptation reduces competitive dominance and alters community assembly
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