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Experimental evidence that competition between stickleback species favours adaptive character divergence
Authors:Suzanne M Gray  & Beren W Robinson
Institution:Department of Zoology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada, N1G 2W1.
Abstract:The ecological character displacement hypothesis assumes that the effects of interspecific resource competition cause divergent selection to favour phenotypes that exploit non-shared resources. This model predicts that interspecific competition declines with increased divergence. Direct tests of this decline are rare despite much comparative evidence for character displacement. We tested this prediction using a pair of divergent brook sticklebacks. Brook sticklebacks sympatric with ninespine sticklebacks have diverged from local allopatric brook populations, and so the two types of brook sticklebacks potentially represent pre- and post-displacement forms. We used enclosures placed in a lake to compare short-term fitness (growth) of sympatric (post-displacement) and allopatric (pre-displacement) brook forms in the presence and absence of ninespine sticklebacks. Brook sticklebacks grew less in the presence vs. absence of ninespine sticklebacks, indicating that interspecific competition occurred. As expected, allopatric brook forms had lower growth than sympatric forms when ninespine sticklebacks were present. This result suggests that ecological character displacement has occurred.
Keywords:Adaptive divergence              Culaea inconstans            ecological character displacement  field experiment  frequency-dependent selection  interspecific competition              Pungitius pungitius
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