Evaluating the targets of selection during character displacement |
| |
Authors: | Martin Ryan A Pfennig David W |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Biology, CB#3280, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599, USA. ryan_martin@ncsu.edu |
| |
Abstract: | Ecological character displacement occurs when competition imposes divergent selection on interacting species, causing divergence in traits associated with resource use. Generally, divergence is assumed to occur when selection acts on the same, continuously varying trait in both species. However, selection might target multiple traits, and even closely related heterospecifics involved in character displacement might differ in selective targets. We investigated the targets of selection in a species of spadefoot toad, Spea multiplicata, during experimentally imposed competition with a congener, S. bombifrons. When examining traits separately, we found significant selection acting on multiple resource-acquisition traits. Yet, controlling for the independent effects of these traits in a multiple regression revealed that direct selection on a single trait might have contributed toward indirect selection on other correlated traits. Moreover, although we found evidence for plasticity in most traits, competition with S. bombifrons imposed selection on morphology and not on plasticity. Additional experiments suggest that the selective targets during character displacement might differ between the two species involved in this one instance of character displacement. Identifying the targets of competitively mediated selection is crucial, because whether and how character displacement ultimately unfolds depends on the nature of these targets and correlations among them. |
| |
Keywords: | Competition divergent selection phenotypic plasticity selection differential selection gradient Spea targets of selection |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|