Litcius/Paper detail

Competitive history shapes rapid evolution in a seasonal climate

Tess Nahanni Grainger, Seth M. Rudman, Paul Schmidt, Jonathan M. Levine

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences56 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

populations in the fall, after all interspecific competition had ceased. Specifically, flies with a history of interspecific competition evolved under fall conditions to be larger and have lower cold fecundity and faster development than flies without a history of interspecific competition. Surprisingly, this divergent fall evolutionary trajectory occurred in the absence of any detectible effect of the summer competitive environment on phenotypic evolution over the summer or population dynamics in the fall. This study demonstrates that competitive interactions can leave a legacy that shapes evolutionary responses to climate even after competition has ceased, and more broadly, that evolution in response to one selective pressure can fundamentally alter evolution in response to subsequent agents of selection.

Topics & Concepts

Competition (biology)Competitor analysisEcologyClimate changeAdaptation (eye)TrajectoryBiologyEvolutionary ecologyEvolutionary dynamicsField (mathematics)Experimental evolutionEvolutionary biologyPopulationEconomicsGeneSociologyNeurosciencePure mathematicsHost (biology)ManagementMathematicsPhysicsAstronomyDemographyBiochemistryEvolution and Genetic DynamicsPlant and animal studiesAnimal Ecology and Behavior Studies