Experimental Evolution ofPseudomonas fluorescensin Simple and Complex Environments
- 1 October 2005
- journal article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The American Naturalist
- Vol. 166 (4) , 470-480
- https://doi.org/10.1086/444440
Abstract
In complex environments that contain several substitutable resources, lineages may become specialized to consume only one or a few of them. Here we investigate the importance of environmental complexity in determining the evolution of niche width over approximately 900 generations in a chemically defined experimental system. We propagated 120 replicate lines of the bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens in environments of different complexity by using between one and eight carbon substrates in each environment. Genotypes from populations selected in complex environments evolved greater mean and variance in fitness than those from populations selected in simple environments. Thus, lineages were able to adapt to several substrates simultaneously without any appreciable loss of function with respect to other substrates present in the media. There was greater genetic and genotype-by-environment interaction variance for fitness within populations selected in complex environments. It is likely that genetic variance in populations grown on complex media was maintained because the identity of the fittest genotype varied among carbon substrates. Our results suggest that evolution in complex environments will result neither in narrow specialists nor in complete generalists but instead in overlapping imperfect generalists, each of which has become adapted to a certain range of substrates but not to all.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- The genetic theory of adaptation: a brief historyNature Reviews Genetics, 2005
- The Speed of Adaptation in Large Asexual PopulationsGenetics, 2004
- Experimental Adaptive Radiation inPseudomonasThe American Naturalist, 2002
- Application of Carbon Source Utilization Patterns To Measure the Metabolic Similarity of Complex Dental Plaque Biofilm MicrocosmsApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2002
- Lack of evolutionary stasis during alternating replication of an arbovirus in insect and mammalian cellsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1999
- Mutational collapse of fitness in marginal habitats and the evolution of ecological specialisationJournal of Evolutionary Biology, 1997
- Relationships among analytical methods used to study genotypic variation and genotype-by-environment interaction in plant breeding multi-environment experimentsTheoretical and Applied Genetics, 1994
- Soft selection and quantitative genetic variation: a laboratory experimentHeredity, 1991
- Adaptation to environmental heterogeneity in populations ofDrosophila melanogasterGenetics Research, 1987
- The Aerobic Pseudomonads a Taxonomic StudyJournal of General Microbiology, 1966