Adaptive diversification of a plastic trait in a predictably fluctuating environment |
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Authors: | Herron Matthew D Doebeli Michael |
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Affiliation: | Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, #2370-6270 University Boulevard, Vancouver, B.C., Canada V6T 1Z4 |
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Abstract: | There is substantial evidence that evolutionary diversification can occur in allopatric conditions through reduction in the degree of phenotypic plasticity when an isolated population encounters a novel, more stable environment. Plasticity is no longer favored in the new environment, either because it carries an inherent physiological cost or because it leads to production of suboptimal phenotypes. In order to explore the role of phenotypic plasticity in sympatric diversification, we modeled the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of Escherichia coli bacteria in batch cultures. Our results describe an evolutionary pathway leading to metabolic diversification in a sympatric environment without spatial structure. In an environment that fluctuates widely and predictably, evolutionary branching leads to diversification and stable coexistence of generalist and specialist ecotypes for some combinations of parameters. Diversification and stable coexistence occur when reaction norms are steep and trade-offs between metabolic pathways are convex. We conclude that, in principle, diversification due to reduced plasticity can occur without allopatric isolation, reduced environmental variability, or an explicit cost of plasticity. |
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Keywords: | Adaptive dynamics Escherichia coli Genetic assimilation Metabolism Phenotypic plasticity |
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