Host use dynamics in a heterogeneous fitness landscape generates oscillations in host range and diversification
Authored by Mariana P Braga, Sabrina B L Araujo, Salvatore Agosta, Daniel Brooks, Eric Hoberg, Soren Nylin, Niklas Janz, Walter A Boeger
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1111/evo.13557
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Fortran
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/mpiresbr/host-parasite-ibm
Abstract
Colonization of novel hosts is thought to play an important role in
parasite diversification, yet little consensus has been achieved about
the macroevolutionary consequences of changes in host use. Here, we
offer a mechanistic basis for the origins of parasite diversity by
simulating lineages evolved in silico. We describe an individual-based
model in which (i) parasites undergo sexual reproduction limited by
genetic proximity, (ii) hosts are uniformly distributed along a
one-dimensional resource gradient, and (iii) host use is determined by
the interaction between the phenotype of the parasite and a
heterogeneous fitness landscape. We found two main effects of host use
on the evolution of a parasite lineage. First, the colonization of a
novel host allowed parasites to explore new areas of the resource space,
increasing phenotypic and genotypic variation. Second, hosts produced
heterogeneity in the parasite fitness landscape, which led to
reproductive isolation and therefore, speciation. As a validation of the
model, we analyzed empirical data from Nymphalidae butterflies and their
host plants. We then assessed the number of hosts used by parasite
lineages and the diversity of resources they encompass. In both
simulated and empirical systems, host diversity emerged as the main
predictor of parasite species richness.
Tags
Individual-based model
models
Specialization
Dispersal
patterns
speciation
Association
Butterflies
Host range
Parasite diversity
Phenotypic
amplitude
Plant utilization
Diet breadth
Generalists