A Tale of Two Morphs: Modeling Pollen Transfer, Magic Traits, and Reproductive Isolation in Parapatry
Authored by Benjamin C Haller, Vos Jurriaan M de, Barbara Keller, Andrew P Hendry, Elena Conti
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0106512
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Objective C
Cocoa
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The evolution of the flower is commonly thought to have spurred
angiosperm diversification. Similarly, particular floral traits might
have promoted diversification within specific angiosperm clades. We
hypothesize that traits promoting the precise positional transfer of
pollen between flowers might promote diversification. In particular, precise pollen transfer might produce partial reproductive isolation
that facilitates adaptive divergence between parapatric populations
differing in their reproductive-organ positions. We investigate this
hypothesis with an individual-based model of pollen transfer dynamics
associated with heterostyly, a floral syndrome that depends on precise
pollen transfer. Our model shows that precise pollen transfer can cause
sexual selection leading to divergence in reproductive-organ positions
between populations served by different pollinators, pleiotropically
causing an increase in reproductive isolation through a ``magic trait''
mechanism. Furthermore, this increased reproductive isolation
facilitates adaptive divergence between the populations in an unlinked, ecologically selected trait. In a different pollination scenario, however, precise pollen transfer causes a decrease in adaptive
divergence by promoting asymmetric gene flow. Our results highlight the
idea that magic traits are not ``magic'' in isolation; in particular, the effect size of magic traits in speciation depends on the external
environment, and also on other traits that modify the strength of the
magic trait's influence on non-random mating. Overall, we show that the
evolutionary consequences of pollen transfer dynamics can depend
strongly on the available pollinator fauna and on the morphological fit
between flowers and pollinators. Furthermore, our results illustrate the
potential importance of even weak reproductive isolating barriers in
facilitating adaptive divergence.
Tags
sexual selection
Natural-populations
Lock-and-key
Flowering plants
Evolutionary
implications
Ethological isolation
Phenotypic selection
Style polymorphism
Distylous turnera
Self-interference