scholarly journals Sexual dimorphism in an adaptive radiation: Does intersexual niche differentiation result in ecological character displacement?

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin D. Wasiljew ◽  
Jobst Pfaender ◽  
Benjamin Wipfler ◽  
Mariam Gabelaia ◽  
Ilham Vemandra Utama ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (6) ◽  
pp. 20180124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen P. De Lisle ◽  
Samuel Paiva ◽  
Locke Rowe

Ecological differences between the sexes are often interpreted as evidence of within-species ecological character displacement (ECD), a hypothesis with almost no direct tests. Here, we experimentally test two predictions that are direct corollaries of ECD between the sexes, in a salamander. First, we find support for the prediction that each sex has a growth rate advantage in the aquatic microhabitat where it is most commonly found. Second, we test the prediction that selection for ECD in the breeding environment may affect partial migration out of this environment. We found that phenotype-dependent migration resulted in a shift in the phenotypic distribution across treatments, with the highest sexual dimorphism occurring among residents at high founding density, suggesting that migration and ECD can both be driven by competition. Our work illustrates how complex patterns of habitat partitioning evolve during ECD between the sexes and suggest ECD and partial migration can interact to effect both ecological dynamics and evolution of sexual dimorphism.


Author(s):  
Michael Doebeli

This chapter focuses on evolutionary branching in niche position due to frequency-dependent competition. When the majority phenotype of a population is competing for one type of resource, selection may favor minority phenotypes that consume different types of resources, which could result in phenotypic differentiation and divergence. The idea of divergence due to competition is also the basis for the well-known concept of ecological character displacement, although here the focus is not so much on the origin of diversity arising in a single species, but rather on the evolutionary dynamics of existing diversity between different and already established species. Ecological character displacement embodies the possibility that competition between species can drive divergence in characters determining resource use. However, there are alternative evolutionary scenarios for phenotypic diversification. In the context of resource competition, one such alternative is that individuals diversify their diet by evolving a wider niche.


1992 ◽  
Vol 140 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dolph Schluter ◽  
John Donald McPhail

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