| Literature DB >> 29345312 |
Rick A Relyea1, Patrick R Stephens2, Lisa N Barrow3, Andrew R Blaustein4, Paul W Bradley5, Julia C Buck6, Ann Chang7, James P Collins8, Brian Crother9, Julia Earl10, Stephanie S Gervasi11, Jason T Hoverman12, Oliver Hyman8, Emily Moriarty Lemmon13, Thomas M Luhring14, Moses Michelson13, Chris Murray15, Steven Price16, Raymond D Semlitsch17, Andrew Sih18, Aaron B Stoler1, Nick VandenBroek9, Alexa Warwick13, Greta Wengert18, John I Hammond3.
Abstract
Environmental variation favors the evolution of phenotypic plasticity. For many species, we understand the costs and benefits of different phenotypes, but we lack a broad understanding of how plastic traits evolve across large clades. Using identical experiments conducted across North America, we examined prey responses to predator cues. We quantified five life-history traits and the magnitude of their plasticity for 23 amphibian species/populations (spanning three families and five genera) when exposed to no cues, crushed-egg cues, and predatory crayfish cues. Embryonic responses varied considerably among species and phylogenetic signal was common among the traits, whereas phylogenetic signal was rare for trait plasticities. Among trait-evolution models, the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck (OU) model provided the best fit or was essentially tied with Brownian motion. Using the best fitting model, evolutionary rates for plasticities were higher than traits for three life-history traits and lower for two. These data suggest that the evolution of life-history traits in amphibian embryos is more constrained by a species' position in the phylogeny than is the evolution of life history plasticities. The fact that an OU model of trait evolution was often a good fit to patterns of trait variation may indicate adaptive optima for traits and their plasticities.Entities:
Keywords: Anaxyrus; Hyla; Lithobates; Pseudacris; Rana; phylogenetic inertia
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29345312 PMCID: PMC6131697 DOI: 10.1111/evo.13428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evolution ISSN: 0014-3820 Impact factor: 3.694