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Evidence of weaker phenotypic plasticity by prey to novel cues from non‐native predators
Authors:Johan Hollander  Paul E Bourdeau
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Aquatic Ecology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden;2. Department of Biological Sciences, Humboldt State University, Arcata, California
Abstract:A central question in evolutionary biology is how coevolutionary history between predator and prey influences their interactions. Contemporary global change and range expansion of exotic organisms impose a great challenge for prey species, which are increasingly exposed to invading non‐native predators, with which they share no evolutionary history. Here, we complete a comprehensive survey of empirical studies of coevolved and naive predator?prey interactions to assess whether a shared evolutionary history with predators influences the magnitude of predator‐induced defenses mounted by prey. Using marine bivalves and gastropods as model prey, we found that coevolved prey and predator‐naive prey showed large discrepancies in magnitude of predator‐induced phenotypic plasticity. Although naive prey, predominantly among bivalve species, did exhibit some level of plasticity – prey exposed to native predators showed significantly larger amounts of phenotypic plasticity. We discuss these results and the implications they may have for native communities and ecosystems.
Keywords:Coevolution  inducible defensive traits  meta‐analysis  naive interactions
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