Ecological niche dimensionality and the evolutionary diversification of stick insects.

The degree of phenotypic divergence and reproductive isolation between taxon pairs can vary quantitatively, and often increases as evolutionary divergence proceeds through various stages, from polymorphism to population differentiation, ecotype and race formation, speciation, and post-speciational d...

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Main Authors: Patrik Nosil, Cristina P Sandoval
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-04-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2270911?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-835cdc31e93c4cf288f7bd891601a05a2020-11-25T00:27:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032008-04-0134e190710.1371/journal.pone.0001907Ecological niche dimensionality and the evolutionary diversification of stick insects.Patrik NosilCristina P SandovalThe degree of phenotypic divergence and reproductive isolation between taxon pairs can vary quantitatively, and often increases as evolutionary divergence proceeds through various stages, from polymorphism to population differentiation, ecotype and race formation, speciation, and post-speciational divergence. Although divergent natural selection promotes divergence, it does not always result in strong differentiation. For example, divergent selection can fail to complete speciation, and distinct species pairs sometimes collapse ('speciation in reverse'). Widely-discussed explanations for this variability concern genetic architecture, and the geographic arrangement of populations. A less-explored possibility is that the degree of phenotypic and reproductive divergence between taxon pairs is positively related to the number of ecological niche dimensions (i.e., traits) subject to divergent selection. Some data supporting this idea stem from laboratory experimental evolution studies using Drosophila, but tests from nature are lacking. Here we report results from manipulative field experiments in natural populations of herbivorous Timema stick insects that are consistent with this 'niche dimensionality' hypothesis. In such insects, divergent selection between host plants might occur for cryptic colouration (camouflage to evade visual predation), physiology (to detoxify plant chemicals), or both of these niche dimensions. We show that divergent selection on the single niche dimension of cryptic colouration can result in ecotype formation and intermediate levels of phenotypic and reproductive divergence between populations feeding on different hosts. However, greater divergence between a species pair involved divergent selection on both niche dimensions. Although further replication of the trends reported here is required, the results suggest that dimensionality of selection may complement genetic and geographic explanations for the degree of diversification in nature.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2270911?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrik Nosil
Cristina P Sandoval
spellingShingle Patrik Nosil
Cristina P Sandoval
Ecological niche dimensionality and the evolutionary diversification of stick insects.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Patrik Nosil
Cristina P Sandoval
author_sort Patrik Nosil
title Ecological niche dimensionality and the evolutionary diversification of stick insects.
title_short Ecological niche dimensionality and the evolutionary diversification of stick insects.
title_full Ecological niche dimensionality and the evolutionary diversification of stick insects.
title_fullStr Ecological niche dimensionality and the evolutionary diversification of stick insects.
title_full_unstemmed Ecological niche dimensionality and the evolutionary diversification of stick insects.
title_sort ecological niche dimensionality and the evolutionary diversification of stick insects.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2008-04-01
description The degree of phenotypic divergence and reproductive isolation between taxon pairs can vary quantitatively, and often increases as evolutionary divergence proceeds through various stages, from polymorphism to population differentiation, ecotype and race formation, speciation, and post-speciational divergence. Although divergent natural selection promotes divergence, it does not always result in strong differentiation. For example, divergent selection can fail to complete speciation, and distinct species pairs sometimes collapse ('speciation in reverse'). Widely-discussed explanations for this variability concern genetic architecture, and the geographic arrangement of populations. A less-explored possibility is that the degree of phenotypic and reproductive divergence between taxon pairs is positively related to the number of ecological niche dimensions (i.e., traits) subject to divergent selection. Some data supporting this idea stem from laboratory experimental evolution studies using Drosophila, but tests from nature are lacking. Here we report results from manipulative field experiments in natural populations of herbivorous Timema stick insects that are consistent with this 'niche dimensionality' hypothesis. In such insects, divergent selection between host plants might occur for cryptic colouration (camouflage to evade visual predation), physiology (to detoxify plant chemicals), or both of these niche dimensions. We show that divergent selection on the single niche dimension of cryptic colouration can result in ecotype formation and intermediate levels of phenotypic and reproductive divergence between populations feeding on different hosts. However, greater divergence between a species pair involved divergent selection on both niche dimensions. Although further replication of the trends reported here is required, the results suggest that dimensionality of selection may complement genetic and geographic explanations for the degree of diversification in nature.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2270911?pdf=render
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