Evolution of adult male horn developmental phenotypes and character displacement in Xylotrupes beetles (Scarabaeidae)

Abstract Character displacement that leads to divergent phenotypes between sympatric species has been hypothesized to facilitate coexistence and promote the accumulation of biodiversity. However, there are alternative evolutionary mechanisms that may also lead to the evolution of phenotypic divergen...

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Main Authors: Jen‐Pan Huang, Brett Morgan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-05-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7448
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spelling doaj-f04adb6e601049e189a5d103a5609e712021-05-19T04:56:22ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-05-0111105503551010.1002/ece3.7448Evolution of adult male horn developmental phenotypes and character displacement in Xylotrupes beetles (Scarabaeidae)Jen‐Pan Huang0Brett Morgan1Biodiversity Research Center Academia Sinica Taipei TaiwanBiodiversity Research Center Academia Sinica Taipei TaiwanAbstract Character displacement that leads to divergent phenotypes between sympatric species has been hypothesized to facilitate coexistence and promote the accumulation of biodiversity. However, there are alternative evolutionary mechanisms that may also lead to the evolution of phenotypic divergence between sympatric species; one of the mechanisms is evolutionary contingency. We studied the evolution of the presence and absence of a major male horn phenotype, which may have ecological implications for promoting coexistence between sympatric beetles, across geographic populations from different Xylotrupes beetles. By using a previously published phylogeny with 80 Xylotrupes taxa, we estimated the transition rates between the two phenotypic states (i.e., presence vs. absence of a major male phenotype). Based on the estimated transition rates, we then simulated possible phenotypic outcomes between sympatric species. We found that sympatric species were equally likely to evolve the same versus distinct phenotypic states based on the estimated transition rates given the phylogeny. The empirically observed number of sympatric species showing different phenotypic states can be explained by evolutionary contingency alone. We discussed the importance of applying phylogenetic comparative methods when studying phenotypic evolution and more generally to investigate the effect of stochastic processes before making deterministic inferences.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7448beetle horncharacter displacementevolutionary contingencyphylogenetic comparative methodXylotrupes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jen‐Pan Huang
Brett Morgan
spellingShingle Jen‐Pan Huang
Brett Morgan
Evolution of adult male horn developmental phenotypes and character displacement in Xylotrupes beetles (Scarabaeidae)
Ecology and Evolution
beetle horn
character displacement
evolutionary contingency
phylogenetic comparative method
Xylotrupes
author_facet Jen‐Pan Huang
Brett Morgan
author_sort Jen‐Pan Huang
title Evolution of adult male horn developmental phenotypes and character displacement in Xylotrupes beetles (Scarabaeidae)
title_short Evolution of adult male horn developmental phenotypes and character displacement in Xylotrupes beetles (Scarabaeidae)
title_full Evolution of adult male horn developmental phenotypes and character displacement in Xylotrupes beetles (Scarabaeidae)
title_fullStr Evolution of adult male horn developmental phenotypes and character displacement in Xylotrupes beetles (Scarabaeidae)
title_full_unstemmed Evolution of adult male horn developmental phenotypes and character displacement in Xylotrupes beetles (Scarabaeidae)
title_sort evolution of adult male horn developmental phenotypes and character displacement in xylotrupes beetles (scarabaeidae)
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Character displacement that leads to divergent phenotypes between sympatric species has been hypothesized to facilitate coexistence and promote the accumulation of biodiversity. However, there are alternative evolutionary mechanisms that may also lead to the evolution of phenotypic divergence between sympatric species; one of the mechanisms is evolutionary contingency. We studied the evolution of the presence and absence of a major male horn phenotype, which may have ecological implications for promoting coexistence between sympatric beetles, across geographic populations from different Xylotrupes beetles. By using a previously published phylogeny with 80 Xylotrupes taxa, we estimated the transition rates between the two phenotypic states (i.e., presence vs. absence of a major male phenotype). Based on the estimated transition rates, we then simulated possible phenotypic outcomes between sympatric species. We found that sympatric species were equally likely to evolve the same versus distinct phenotypic states based on the estimated transition rates given the phylogeny. The empirically observed number of sympatric species showing different phenotypic states can be explained by evolutionary contingency alone. We discussed the importance of applying phylogenetic comparative methods when studying phenotypic evolution and more generally to investigate the effect of stochastic processes before making deterministic inferences.
topic beetle horn
character displacement
evolutionary contingency
phylogenetic comparative method
Xylotrupes
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7448
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AT brettmorgan evolutionofadultmalehorndevelopmentalphenotypesandcharacterdisplacementinxylotrupesbeetlesscarabaeidae
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