Literature DB >> 21084350

Phenotypic convergence along a gradient of predation risk.

S R Dennis1, Mauricio J Carter, W T Hentley, A P Beckerman.   

Abstract

A long-standing question in ecology is whether phenotypic plasticity, rather than selection per se, is responsible for phenotypic variation among populations. Plasticity can increase or decrease variation, but most previous studies have been limited to single populations, single traits and a small number of environments assessed using univariate reaction norms. Here, examining two genetically distinct populations of Daphnia pulex with different predation histories, we quantified predator-induced plasticity among 11 traits along a fine-scale gradient of predation risk by a predator (Chaoborus) common to both populations. We test the hypothesis that plasticity can be responsible for convergence in phenotypes among different populations by experimentally characterizing multivariate reaction norms with phenotypic trajectory analysis (PTA). Univariate analyses showed that all genotypes increased age and size at maturity, and invested in defensive spikes (neckteeth), but failed to quantitatively describe whole-organism response. In contrast, PTA quantified and qualified the phenotypic strategy the organism mobilized against the selection pressure. We demonstrate, at the whole-organism level, that the two populations occupy different areas of phenotypic space in the absence of predation but converge in phenotypic space as predation threat increases.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21084350      PMCID: PMC3081771          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2010.1989

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


  14 in total

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Review 3.  Developmental plasticity and the origin of species differences.

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6.  Costs, benefits and the evolution of inducible defences: a case study with Daphnia pulex.

Authors:  E Hammill; A Rogers; A P Beckerman
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7.  Analysis of two-state multivariate phenotypic change in ecological studies.

Authors:  Michael L Collyer; Dean C Adams
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5.  The alignment between phenotypic plasticity, the major axis of genetic variation and the response to selection.

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6.  Evolution of a predator-induced, nonlinear reaction norm.

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8.  Environment not dispersal limitation drives clonal composition of Arctic Daphnia in a recently deglaciated area.

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10.  Endocrine regulation of predator-induced phenotypic plasticity.

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