Reproductive flexibility: genetic variation, genetic costs and long-term evolution in a collembola.

In a variable yet predictable world, organisms may use environmental cues to make adaptive adjustments to their phenotype. Such phenotypic flexibility is expected commonly to evolve in life history traits, which are closely tied to Darwinian fitness. Yet adaptive life history flexibility remains poo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thomas Tully, Régis Ferrière
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-09-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2527682?pdf=render
id doaj-8eb905e618ea423f9dfc9f2418ebe940
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8eb905e618ea423f9dfc9f2418ebe9402020-11-25T01:49:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032008-09-0139e320710.1371/journal.pone.0003207Reproductive flexibility: genetic variation, genetic costs and long-term evolution in a collembola.Thomas TullyRégis FerrièreIn a variable yet predictable world, organisms may use environmental cues to make adaptive adjustments to their phenotype. Such phenotypic flexibility is expected commonly to evolve in life history traits, which are closely tied to Darwinian fitness. Yet adaptive life history flexibility remains poorly documented. Here we introduce the collembolan Folsomia candida, a soil-dweller, parthenogenetic (all-female) microarthropod, as a model organism to study the phenotypic expression, genetic variation, fitness consequences and long-term evolution of life history flexibility. We demonstrate that collembola have a remarkable adaptive ability for adjusting their reproductive phenotype: when transferred from harsh to good conditions (in terms of food ration and crowding), a mother can fine-tune the number and the size of her eggs from one clutch to the next. The comparative analysis of eleven clonal populations of worldwide origins reveals (i) genetic variation in mean egg size under both good and bad conditions; (ii) no genetic variation in egg size flexibility, consistent with convergent evolution to a common physiological limit; (iii) genetic variation of both mean reproductive investment and reproductive investment flexibility, associated with a reversal of the genetic correlation between egg size and clutch size between environmental conditions ; (iv) a negative genetic correlation between reproductive investment flexibility and adult lifespan. Phylogenetic reconstruction shows that two life history strategies, called HIFLEX and LOFLEX, evolved early in evolutionary history. HIFLEX includes six of our 11 clones, and is characterized by large mean egg size and reproductive investment, high reproductive investment flexibility, and low adult survival. LOFLEX (the other five clones) has small mean egg size and low reproductive investment, low reproductive investment flexibility, and high adult survival. The divergence of HIFLEX and LOFLEX could represent different adaptations to environments differing in mean quality and variability, or indicate that a genetic polymorphism of reproductive investment reaction norms has evolved under a physiological tradeoff between reproductive investment flexibility and adult lifespan.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2527682?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Tully
Régis Ferrière
spellingShingle Thomas Tully
Régis Ferrière
Reproductive flexibility: genetic variation, genetic costs and long-term evolution in a collembola.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Thomas Tully
Régis Ferrière
author_sort Thomas Tully
title Reproductive flexibility: genetic variation, genetic costs and long-term evolution in a collembola.
title_short Reproductive flexibility: genetic variation, genetic costs and long-term evolution in a collembola.
title_full Reproductive flexibility: genetic variation, genetic costs and long-term evolution in a collembola.
title_fullStr Reproductive flexibility: genetic variation, genetic costs and long-term evolution in a collembola.
title_full_unstemmed Reproductive flexibility: genetic variation, genetic costs and long-term evolution in a collembola.
title_sort reproductive flexibility: genetic variation, genetic costs and long-term evolution in a collembola.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2008-09-01
description In a variable yet predictable world, organisms may use environmental cues to make adaptive adjustments to their phenotype. Such phenotypic flexibility is expected commonly to evolve in life history traits, which are closely tied to Darwinian fitness. Yet adaptive life history flexibility remains poorly documented. Here we introduce the collembolan Folsomia candida, a soil-dweller, parthenogenetic (all-female) microarthropod, as a model organism to study the phenotypic expression, genetic variation, fitness consequences and long-term evolution of life history flexibility. We demonstrate that collembola have a remarkable adaptive ability for adjusting their reproductive phenotype: when transferred from harsh to good conditions (in terms of food ration and crowding), a mother can fine-tune the number and the size of her eggs from one clutch to the next. The comparative analysis of eleven clonal populations of worldwide origins reveals (i) genetic variation in mean egg size under both good and bad conditions; (ii) no genetic variation in egg size flexibility, consistent with convergent evolution to a common physiological limit; (iii) genetic variation of both mean reproductive investment and reproductive investment flexibility, associated with a reversal of the genetic correlation between egg size and clutch size between environmental conditions ; (iv) a negative genetic correlation between reproductive investment flexibility and adult lifespan. Phylogenetic reconstruction shows that two life history strategies, called HIFLEX and LOFLEX, evolved early in evolutionary history. HIFLEX includes six of our 11 clones, and is characterized by large mean egg size and reproductive investment, high reproductive investment flexibility, and low adult survival. LOFLEX (the other five clones) has small mean egg size and low reproductive investment, low reproductive investment flexibility, and high adult survival. The divergence of HIFLEX and LOFLEX could represent different adaptations to environments differing in mean quality and variability, or indicate that a genetic polymorphism of reproductive investment reaction norms has evolved under a physiological tradeoff between reproductive investment flexibility and adult lifespan.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2527682?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT thomastully reproductiveflexibilitygeneticvariationgeneticcostsandlongtermevolutioninacollembola
AT regisferriere reproductiveflexibilitygeneticvariationgeneticcostsandlongtermevolutioninacollembola
_version_ 1725003944997945344