10 research outputs found
Rapid contemporary evolution and clonal food web dynamics
Character evolution that affects ecological community interactions often
occurs contemporaneously with temporal changes in population size, potentially
altering the very nature of those dynamics. Such eco-evolutionary processes may
be most readily explored in systems with short generations and simple genetics.
Asexual and cyclically parthenogenetic organisms such as microalgae,
cladocerans, and rotifers, which frequently dominate freshwater plankton
communities, meet these requirements. Multiple clonal lines can coexist within
each species over extended periods, until either fixation occurs or a sexual
phase reshuffles the genetic material. When clones differ in traits affecting
interspecific interactions, within-species clonal dynamics can have major
effects on the population dynamics. We first consider a simple predator-prey
system with two prey genotypes, parameterized with data on a well-studied
experimental system, and explore how the extent of differences in defense
against predation within the prey population determine dynamic stability versus
instability of the system. We then explore how increased potential for
evolution affects the community dynamics in a more general community model with
multiple predator and multiple prey genotypes. These examples illustrate how
microevolutionary "details" that enhance or limit the potential for heritable
phenotypic change can have significant effects on contemporaneous
community-level dynamics and the persistence and coexistence of species.Comment: 30 pages, 6 Figure
Herbivory: effects on plant abundance, distribution and population growth
Plants are attacked by many different consumers. A critical question is how often, and under what conditions, common reductions in growth, fecundity or even survival that occur due to herbivory translate to meaningful impacts on abundance, distribution or dynamics of plant populations. Here, we review population-level studies of the effects of consumers on plant dynamics and evaluate: (i) whether particular consumers have predictably more or less influence on plant abundance, (ii) whether particular plant life-history types are predictably more vulnerable to herbivory at the population level, (iii) whether the strength of plant–consumer interactions shifts predictably across environmental gradients and (iv) the role of consumers in influencing plant distributional limits. Existing studies demonstrate numerous examples of consumers limiting local plant abundance and distribution. We found larger effects of consumers on grassland than woodland forbs, stronger effects of herbivory in areas with high versus low disturbance, but no systematic or unambiguous differences in the impact of consumers based on plant life-history or herbivore feeding mode. However, our ability to evaluate these and other patterns is limited by the small (but growing) number of studies in this area. As an impetus for further study, we review strengths and challenges of population-level studies, such as interpreting net impacts of consumers in the presence of density dependence and seed bank dynamics
From genes to ecosystems: a synthesis of the effects of plant genetic factors across levels of organization
Using two genetic approaches and seven different plant systems, we present findings from a meta-analysis examining the strength of the effects of plant genetic introgression and genotypic diversity across individual, community and ecosystem levels with the goal of synthesizing the patterns to date. We found that (i) the strength of plant genetic effects can be quite high; however, the overall strength of genetic effects on most response variables declined as the levels of organization increased. (ii) Plant genetic effects varied such that introgression had a greater impact on individual phenotypes than extended effects on arthropods or microbes/fungi. By contrast, the greatest effects of genotypic diversity were on arthropods. (iii) Plant genetic effects were greater on above-ground versus below-ground processes, but there was no difference between terrestrial and aquatic environments. (iv) The strength of the effects of intraspecific genotypic diversity tended to be weaker than interspecific genetic introgression. (v) Although genetic effects generally decline across levels of organization, in some cases they do not, suggesting that specific organisms and/or processes may respond more than others to underlying genetic variation. Because patterns in the overall impacts of introgression and genotypic diversity were generally consistent across diverse study systems and consistent with theoretical expectations, these results provide generality for understanding the extended consequences of plant genetic variation across levels of organization, with evolutionary implications
Evaluating Methods for Isolating Total RNA and Predicting the Success of Sequencing Phylogenetically Diverse Plant Transcriptomes
10.1371/journal.pone.0050226PLoS ONE711e5022
Global urban environmental change drives adaptation in white clover
Urbanization transforms environments in ways that alter biological evolution. We examined whether urban environmental change drives parallel evolution by sampling 110,019 white clover plants from 6169 populations in 160 cities globally. Plants were assayed for a Mendelian antiherbivore defense that also affects tolerance to abiotic stressors. Urban-rural gradients were associated with the evolution of clines in defense in 47% of cities throughout the world. Variation in the strength of clines was explained by environmental changes in drought stress and vegetation cover that varied among cities. Sequencing 2074 genomes from 26 cities revealed that the evolution of urban-rural clines was best explained by adaptive evolution, but the degree of parallel adaptation varied among cities. Our results demonstrate that urbanization leads to adaptation at a global scale