Experimental test of predation's effect on divergent selection during character displacement in sticklebacks
- 20 November 2003
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 100 (25) , 14943-14948
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2036360100
Abstract
Ecological character displacement is common in nature but the mechanisms causing divergence are not well understood. The contributions of ecological interactions other than competition have received little attention. We conducted a pond experiment to explore the contribution of both competition and predation to character divergence in threespine stickleback species. We estimated the strength of divergent selection on a morphologically intermediate target population between competition treatments under two alternate predation treatments. Divergent selection on the target population tended to be stronger in the predator-addition treatment than in the predator-reduction treatment, a difference that approached significance (P= 0.09). This trend occurred even though competition was strongest in the predator-reduction treatment. Overall, the strength of divergent selection was best predicted by stickleback mortality (P= 0.025) being strongest where mortality was highest. These results indicate that predation and other agents of mortality can enhance the rate of change in competition per unit of phenotypic divergence and, thereby, divergent selection, even as they lower the overall strength of competition. In this way, predation and other agents of mortality may facilitate, rather than hinder, character displacement.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- FREQUENCY DEPENDENT NATURAL SELECTION DURING CHARACTER DISPLACEMENT IN STICKLEBACKSEvolution, 2003
- A TEST OF ECOLOGICALLY DEPENDENT POSTMATING ISOLATION BETWEEN SYMPATRIC STICKLEBACKSEvolution, 2002
- Character Shifts of Prey Species That Share PredatorsThe American Naturalist, 2000
- Ecological Character Displacement in Adaptive RadiationThe American Naturalist, 2000
- CHARACTER DISPLACEMENT IN POLYPHENIC TADPOLESEvolution, 2000
- Evolutionary Branching and Sympatric Speciation Caused by Different Types of Ecological InteractionsThe American Naturalist, 2000
- The Enigma of Mud Snail Shell Growth: Asymmetrical Competition or Character Displacement?Oikos, 1996
- A Comparison of Two SticklebacksEvolution, 1994
- Ecology and evolution of sympatric sticklebacks (Gasterosteus): evidence for a species-pair in Paxton Lake, Texada Island, British ColumbiaCanadian Journal of Zoology, 1992
- Evidence for the Evolution of Competition Between Two Species of Annual PlantsEvolution, 1981