Eco-evolution in size-structured ecosystems: simulation case study of rapid morphological changes in alewife
Authored by Jung Koo Kang, Xavier Thibert-Plante
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1186/s12862-017-0912-4
Sponsors:
Kempe foundation
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Pseudocode
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
http://datadryad.org/resource/doi:10.5061/dryad.67c7q
Abstract
Background: Over the last 300 years, interactions between alewives and
zooplankton communities in several lakes in the U.S. have caused the
alewives' morphology to transition rapidly from anadromous to
landlocked. Lakes with landlocked alewives contain smaller-bodied
zooplankton than those without alewives. Landlocked adult alewives
display smaller body sizes, narrower gapes, smaller inter-gill-raker
spacings, reach maturity at an earlier age, and are less fecund than
anadromous alewives. Additionally, landlocked alewives consume pelagic
prey exclusively throughout their lives whereas anadromous alewives make
an ontogenetic transition from pelagic to littoral prey. These rapid, well-documented changes in the alewives' morphology provide important
insights into the morphological evolution of fish. Predicting the
morphological evolution of fish is crucial for fisheries and ecosystem
management, but the involvement of multiple trophic interactions make
predictions difficult. To obtain an improved understanding of rapid
morphological change in fish, we developed an individual-based model
that simulated rapid changes in the body size and gill-raker count of a
fish species in a hypothetical, size-structured prey community. Model
parameter values were based mainly on data from empirical studies on
alewives. We adopted a functional trait approach; consequently, the
model explicitly describes the relationships between prey body size, alewife body size, and alewife gill-raker count. We sought to answer two
questions: ( 1) How does the impact of alewife populations on prey feed
back to impact alewife size and gill raker number under several
alternative scenarios? ( 2) Will the trajectory of the landlocked
alewives' morphological evolution change after 150-300 years in
freshwater?
Results: Over the first 250 years, the alewives' numbers of gill-rakers
only increased when reductions in their body size substantially improved
their ability to forage for small prey. Additionally, alewives' gill-
raker counts increased more rapidly as the adverse effects of narrow
gill- raker spacings on foraging for large prey weremade less severe.
For the first150- 250 years, alewives' growth decreased monotonically, and their gill- raker number increased monotonically. After the first
150-250 years, however, the alewives exhibited multiple evolutionary
morphological trajectories in different trophic settings. In several of
these settings, their evolutionary trajectories even reversed after the
first 150-250 years.
Conclusions: Alewives affected the abundance and morphology of their
prey, which in turn changed the abundance and morphology of the
alewives. Complex low-trophic-level interactions can alter the abundance
and characteristics of alewives. This study suggests that the current
morphology of recently (similar to 300 years)-landlocked alewives may
not represent an evolutionarily stable state.
Tags
Individual-based model
Prey
Fish
Body-size
Food webs
Community structure
Interaction strength
Yellow perch
Lake-michigan
Alosa-pseudoharengus wilson
Feeding performance
Fish
predation
Contemporary evolution
Alewife
Body
size
Eco-evolution
Size-structured ecosystem
Ecological power law
Functional trait