Dynamic patterns of adaptive radiation
Top Cited Papers
- 5 December 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 102 (50) , 18040-18045
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0506330102
Abstract
Adaptive radiation is defined as the evolution of ecological and phenotypic diversity within a rapidly multiplying lineage. When it occurs, adaptive radiation typically follows the colonization of a new environment or the establishment of a "key innovation," which opens new ecological niches and/or new paths for evolution. Here, we take advantage of recent developments in speciation theory and modern computing power to build and explore a large-scale, stochastic, spatially explicit, individual-based model of adaptive radiation driven by adaptation to multidimensional ecological niches. We are able to model evolutionary dynamics of populations with hundreds of thousands of sexual diploid individuals over a time span of 100,000 generations assuming realistic mutation rates and allowing for genetic variation in a large number of both selected and neutral loci. Our results provide theoretical support and explanation for a number of empirical patterns including "area effect," "overshooting effect," and "least action effect," as well as for the idea of a "porous genome." Our findings suggest that the genetic architecture of traits involved in the most spectacular radiations might be rather simple. We show that a great majority of speciation events are concentrated early in the phylogeny. Our results emphasize the importance of ecological opportunity and genetic constraints in controlling the dynamics of adaptive radiation.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- INDEPENDENT INHERITANCE OF PREFERENCE AND PERFORMANCE IN HYBRIDS BETWEEN HOST RACES OF MITOURA BUTTERFLIES (LEPIDOPTERA: LYCAENIDAE)Evolution, 2005
- CONVERGENCE AND THE MULTIDIMENSIONAL NICHEEvolution, 2005
- Ecological speciationEcology Letters, 2005
- Community Assembly Through Adaptive Radiation in Hawaiian SpidersScience, 2004
- PERSPECTIVE: MODELS OF SPECIATION: WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED IN 40 YEARS?Evolution, 2003
- MULTILOCUS MODELS OF SYMPATRIC SPECIATION: BUSH VERSUS RICE VERSUS FELSENSTEINEvolution, 2003
- The genic view of the process of speciationJournal of Evolutionary Biology, 2001
- Contingency and Determinism in Replicated Adaptive Radiations of Island LizardsScience, 1998
- Genetic Variation for Habitat Preference: Evidence and ExplanationsThe American Naturalist, 1991
- Reproductive Isolation by Host Specificity in a Pair of Phytophagous Ladybird BeetlesEvolution, 1989