scholarly journals The evolution of conditional dispersal and reproductive isolation along environmental gradients

2011 ◽  
Vol 273 (1) ◽  
pp. 147-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua L. Payne ◽  
Rupert Mazzucco ◽  
Ulf Dieckmann
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas G. Aubier ◽  
Mathieu Joron

AbstractSpecies often replace each-other spatially along ecological or environmental gradients. In models of parapatric speciation driven by assortative mating, delayed mating when females are too choosy about mates has so far been ignored. Yet, this generates a cost of choosiness, which should cause direct sexual selection against female choosiness. In our spatially-explicit individual-based model, disruptive viability selection leads to divergence of an ecological trait in a population distributed along an ecological gradient. Additionally, female choosiness (following a ‘matching mating rule’ based on the same ecological trait) can evolve at the risk of delaying mating, and can limit gene flow between diverging populations. We show that, along ecological gradients, a cost of choosiness associated with delayed mating modifies the genotypic frequencies on which viability selection acts. This cost can even remove much of the viability selection acting indirectly against choosiness at the ends of the gradient, thereby favouring the evolution of strong choosiness. A cost of choosiness can therefore promote reproductive isolation in parapatry, depending on the characteristics of the ecological gradient.


2008 ◽  
Vol 363 (1506) ◽  
pp. 2997-3007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger K Butlin ◽  
Juan Galindo ◽  
John W Grahame

The most common classification of modes of speciation begins with the spatial context in which divergence occurs: sympatric, parapatric or allopatric. This classification is unsatisfactory because it divides a continuum into discrete categories, concentrating attention on the extremes, and it subordinates other dimensions on which speciation processes vary, such as the forces driving differentiation and the genetic basis of reproductive isolation. It also ignores the fact that speciation is a prolonged process that commonly has phases in different spatial contexts. We use the example of local adaptation and partial reproductive isolation in the intertidal gastropod Littorina saxatilis to illustrate the inadequacy of the spatial classification of speciation modes. Parallel divergence in shell form in response to similar environmental gradients in England, Spain and Sweden makes this an excellent model system. However, attempts to demonstrate ‘incipient’ and ‘sympatric’ speciation involve speculation about the future and the past. We suggest that it is more productive to study the current balance between local adaptation and gene flow, the interaction between components of reproductive isolation and the genetic basis of differentiation.


2013 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Brian Langerhans ◽  
Rüdiger Riesch

Abstract Speciation research during the last several decades has confirmed that natural selection frequently drives the generation of new species. But how does this process generally unfold in nature? We argue that answering this question requires a clearer conceptual framework for understanding selection’s role in speciation. We present a unified framework of speciation, providing mechanistic descriptions of fundamentally distinct routes to speciation, and how these may interact during lineage splitting. Two major categories are recognized: reproductive isolation resulting from (1) responses to selection, “speciation by selection,” or (2) non-selective processes, “speciation without selection.” Speciation by selection can occur via three mechanisms: (1) similar selection, (2) divergent selection, and (3) reinforcement selection. Understanding ecology’s role in speciation requires uncovering how these three mechanisms contribute to reproductive isolation, and their relative importance compared to non-selective processes, because all three mechanisms can occur side-by-side during speciation. To accomplish this, we highlight examination of groups of organisms inhabiting replicated environmental gradients. This scenario is common in nature, and a large literature illustrates that both parallel and non-parallel responses to similar environments are widespread, and each can result in speciation. This recognition reveals four general pathways of speciation by similar or divergent selection—parallel and nonparallel responses to similar and divergent selection. Altogether, we present a more precise framework for speciation research, draw attention to some under-recognized features of speciation, emphasize the multidimensionality of speciation, reveal limitations of some previous tests and descriptions of speciation mechanisms, and point to a number of directions for future investigation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 638 ◽  
pp. 149-164
Author(s):  
GM Svendsen ◽  
M Ocampo Reinaldo ◽  
MA Romero ◽  
G Williams ◽  
A Magurran ◽  
...  

With the unprecedented rate of biodiversity change in the world today, understanding how diversity gradients are maintained at mesoscales is a key challenge. Drawing on information provided by 3 comprehensive fishery surveys (conducted in different years but in the same season and with the same sampling design), we used boosted regression tree (BRT) models in order to relate spatial patterns of α-diversity in a demersal fish assemblage to environmental variables in the San Matias Gulf (Patagonia, Argentina). We found that, over a 4 yr period, persistent diversity gradients of species richness and probability of an interspecific encounter (PIE) were shaped by 3 main environmental gradients: bottom depth, connectivity with the open ocean, and proximity to a thermal front. The 2 main patterns we observed were: a monotonic increase in PIE with proximity to fronts, which had a stronger effect at greater depths; and an increase in PIE when closer to the open ocean (a ‘bay effect’ pattern). The originality of this work resides on the identification of high-resolution gradients in local, demersal assemblages driven by static and dynamic environmental gradients in a mesoscale seascape. The maintenance of environmental gradients, specifically those associated with shared resources and connectivity with an open system, may be key to understanding community stability.


2005 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fawzy M. Salama ◽  
Monier Abd El-Ghani ◽  
Salah El Naggar ◽  
Khadija A. Baayo

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