Literature DB >> 28731794

A Neutral Model for the Evolution of Diet Breadth.

Matthew L Forister, Stephen H Jenkins.   

Abstract

Variation in diet breadth among organisms is a pervasive feature of the natural world that has resisted general explanation. In particular, trade-offs in the ability to use one resource at the expense of another have been expected but rarely detected. We explore a spatial model for the evolution of specialization, motivated by studies of plant-feeding insects. The model is neutral with respect to the causes and consequences of diet breadth: the number of hosts utilized is not constrained by trade-offs, and specialization or generalization does not confer a direct advantage with respect to the persistence of populations or the probability of diversification. We find that diet breadth evolves in ways that resemble reports from natural communities. Simulated communities are dominated by specialized species, with a predictable but less species-rich component of generalized taxa. These results raise the possibility that specialization might be a consequence of stochastic diversification dynamics acting on spatially segregated consumer-resource associations rather than a trait either favored or constrained directly by natural selection. Finally, our model generates hypotheses for global patterns of herbivore diet breadth, including a positive effect of host richness and a negative effect of evenness in host plant abundance on the number of specialized taxa.

Entities:  

Keywords:  generalist; neutral model; simulation; specialist

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28731794     DOI: 10.1086/692325

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Nat        ISSN: 0003-0147            Impact factor:   3.926


  6 in total

1.  Root traits explain plant species distributions along climatic gradients yet challenge the nature of ecological trade-offs.

Authors:  Daniel C Laughlin; Liesje Mommer; Francesco Maria Sabatini; Helge Bruelheide; Thom W Kuyper; M Luke McCormack; Joana Bergmann; Grégoire T Freschet; Nathaly R Guerrero-Ramírez; Colleen M Iversen; Jens Kattge; Ina C Meier; Hendrik Poorter; Catherine Roumet; Marina Semchenko; Christopher J Sweeney; Oscar J Valverde-Barrantes; Fons van der Plas; Jasper van Ruijven; Larry M York; Isabelle Aubin; Olivia R Burge; Chaeho Byun; Renata Ćušterevska; Jürgen Dengler; Estelle Forey; Greg R Guerin; Bruno Hérault; Robert B Jackson; Dirk Nikolaus Karger; Jonathan Lenoir; Tatiana Lysenko; Patrick Meir; Ülo Niinemets; Wim A Ozinga; Josep Peñuelas; Peter B Reich; Marco Schmidt; Franziska Schrodt; Eduardo Velázquez; Alexandra Weigelt
Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-06-10       Impact factor: 15.460

2.  Host use diversification during range shifts shapes global variation in Lepidopteran dietary breadth.

Authors:  Lesley T Lancaster
Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol       Date:  2020-05-18       Impact factor: 15.460

3.  On the macroecological significance of eco-evolutionary dynamics: the range shift-niche breadth hypothesis.

Authors:  Lesley T Lancaster
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2022-01-24       Impact factor: 6.237

4.  Does a plant-eating insect's diet govern the evolution of insecticide resistance? Comparative tests of the pre-adaptation hypothesis.

Authors:  Nate B Hardy; Daniel A Peterson; Laura Ross; Jay A Rosenheim
Journal:  Evol Appl       Date:  2017-12-18       Impact factor: 5.183

5.  Butterflies embrace maladaptation and raise fitness in colonizing novel host.

Authors:  Michael C Singer; Camille Parmesan
Journal:  Evol Appl       Date:  2019-02-26       Impact factor: 5.183

6.  Species-complex diversification and host-plant associations in Bemisia tabaci: A plant-defence, detoxification perspective revealed by RNA-Seq analyses.

Authors:  Osnat Malka; Diego Santos-Garcia; Ester Feldmesser; Elad Sharon; Renate Krause-Sakate; Hélène Delatte; Sharon van Brunschot; Mitulkumar Patel; Paul Visendi; Habibu Mugerwa; Susan Seal; John Colvin; Shai Morin
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2018-10-10       Impact factor: 6.185

  6 in total

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