Sympatric speciation in structureless environments
Authored by Wayne M Getz, Richard Salter, Dana Paige Seidel, Hooft Pim van
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1186/s12862-016-0617-0
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Nova
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
http://nature.berkeley.edu/getzlab/NOVA/ssfs.nva
Abstract
Background: Darwin and the architects of the Modern Synthesis found
sympatric speciation difficult to explain and suggested it is unlikely
to occur. Increasingly, evidence over the past few decades suggest that
sympatric speciation can occur under ecological conditions that require
at most intraspecific competition for a structured resource. Here we
used an individual-based population model with variable foraging
strategies to study the evolution of mating behavior among foraging
strategy types. Initially, individuals were placed at random on a
structureless resource landscape, with subsequent spatial variation
induced through foraging activity itself. The fitness of individuals was
determined by their biomass at the end of each generational cycle. The
model incorporates three diallelic, codominant foraging strategy genes, and one mate-choice or m-trait (i.e. incipient magic trait) gene, where
the latter is inactive when random mating is assumed.
Results: Under non-random mating, the m-trait gene promotes increasing
levels of either disassortative or assortative mating when the frequency
of m respectively increases or decreases from 0.5. Our evolutionary
simulations demonstrate that, under initial random mating conditions, an
activated m-trait gene evolves to promote assortative mating because the
system, in trying to fit a multipeak adaptive landscape, causes
heterozygous individuals to be less fit than homozygous individuals.
Conclusion: Our results extend our theoretical understanding that
sympatric speciation can evolve under nicheless or gradientless resource
conditions: i.e. the underlying resource is monomorphic and initially
spatially homogeneous. Further the simplicity and generality of our
model suggests that sympatric speciation may be more likely than
previously thought to occur in mobile, sexually-reproducing organisms.
Tags
Competition
Evolution
Dynamics
sexual selection
Mate Choice
Empirical-evidence
Magic traits
Ecological speciation
Adaptive radiation
Gene flow