An interaction‐driven cannibalistic reaction norm

Abstracts Cannibalism is induced in larval‐stage populations of the Hokkaido salamander, Hynobius retardatus, under the control of a cannibalism reaction norm. Here, I examined phenotypic expression under the cannibalism reaction norm, and how the induction of a cannibalistic morph under the norm le...

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Main Author: Kinya Nishimura
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018-02-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3801
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spelling doaj-f78919b7f12f4a59818cbfd1cfae3a8e2021-04-17T01:25:33ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582018-02-01842305231910.1002/ece3.3801An interaction‐driven cannibalistic reaction normKinya Nishimura0Graduate School of Fisheries Sciences Hokkaido University JapanAbstracts Cannibalism is induced in larval‐stage populations of the Hokkaido salamander, Hynobius retardatus, under the control of a cannibalism reaction norm. Here, I examined phenotypic expression under the cannibalism reaction norm, and how the induction of a cannibalistic morph under the norm leads to populational morphological diversification. I conducted a set of experiments in which density was manipulated to be either low or high. In the high‐density treatment, the populations become dimorphic with some individuals developing into the cannibal morph type. I performed an exploratory analysis based on geometric morphometrics and showed that shape characteristics differed between not only cannibal and noncannibal morph types in the high‐density treatment but also between those morph types and the solitary morph type in the low‐density treatment. Size and shape of cannibal and noncannibal individuals were found to be located at either end of a continuum of expression following a unique size–shape integration rule that was different from the rule governing the size and shape variations of the solitary morph type. This result implies that the high‐density‐driven inducible morphology of an individual is governed by a common integration rule during the development of dimorphism under the control of the cannibalism reaction norm. Phenotypic expression under the cannibalism reaction norm is driven not only by population density but also by social interactions among the members of a population: variation in the populational expression of dimorphism is associated with contingent social interaction events among population members. The induced cannibalistic morph thus reflects not only by contest‐type exploitative competition but also interference competition.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3801cannibalistic dimorphismdensity‐driven expressionexploitative competitiongeometric morphometricsHynobius retardatusinteraction‐driven expression
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kinya Nishimura
spellingShingle Kinya Nishimura
An interaction‐driven cannibalistic reaction norm
Ecology and Evolution
cannibalistic dimorphism
density‐driven expression
exploitative competition
geometric morphometrics
Hynobius retardatus
interaction‐driven expression
author_facet Kinya Nishimura
author_sort Kinya Nishimura
title An interaction‐driven cannibalistic reaction norm
title_short An interaction‐driven cannibalistic reaction norm
title_full An interaction‐driven cannibalistic reaction norm
title_fullStr An interaction‐driven cannibalistic reaction norm
title_full_unstemmed An interaction‐driven cannibalistic reaction norm
title_sort interaction‐driven cannibalistic reaction norm
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Abstracts Cannibalism is induced in larval‐stage populations of the Hokkaido salamander, Hynobius retardatus, under the control of a cannibalism reaction norm. Here, I examined phenotypic expression under the cannibalism reaction norm, and how the induction of a cannibalistic morph under the norm leads to populational morphological diversification. I conducted a set of experiments in which density was manipulated to be either low or high. In the high‐density treatment, the populations become dimorphic with some individuals developing into the cannibal morph type. I performed an exploratory analysis based on geometric morphometrics and showed that shape characteristics differed between not only cannibal and noncannibal morph types in the high‐density treatment but also between those morph types and the solitary morph type in the low‐density treatment. Size and shape of cannibal and noncannibal individuals were found to be located at either end of a continuum of expression following a unique size–shape integration rule that was different from the rule governing the size and shape variations of the solitary morph type. This result implies that the high‐density‐driven inducible morphology of an individual is governed by a common integration rule during the development of dimorphism under the control of the cannibalism reaction norm. Phenotypic expression under the cannibalism reaction norm is driven not only by population density but also by social interactions among the members of a population: variation in the populational expression of dimorphism is associated with contingent social interaction events among population members. The induced cannibalistic morph thus reflects not only by contest‐type exploitative competition but also interference competition.
topic cannibalistic dimorphism
density‐driven expression
exploitative competition
geometric morphometrics
Hynobius retardatus
interaction‐driven expression
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3801
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