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Evolvability and trait function predict phenotypic divergence of plant populations

Øystein H. Opedal, W. Scott Armbruster, Thomas F. Hansen, Agnes Holstad, Christophe Pélabon, Stefan Andersson, Diane R. Campbell, Christina M. Caruso, Lynda F. Delph, Christopher G. Eckert, Åsa Lankinen, Greg M. Walter, Jon Ågren, Geir H. Bolstad

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences64 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Understanding the causes and limits of population divergence in phenotypic traits is a fundamental aim of evolutionary biology, with the potential to yield predictions of adaptation to environmental change. Reciprocal transplant experiments and the evaluation of optimality models suggest that local adaptation is common but not universal, and some studies suggest that trait divergence is highly constrained by genetic variances and covariances of complex phenotypes. We analyze a large database of population divergence in plants and evaluate whether evolutionary divergence scales positively with standing genetic variation within populations (evolvability), as expected if genetic constraints are evolutionarily important. We further evaluate differences in divergence and evolvability-divergence relationships between reproductive and vegetative traits and between selfing, mixed-mating, and outcrossing species, as these factors are expected to influence both patterns of selection and evolutionary potentials. Evolutionary divergence scaled positively with evolvability. Furthermore, trait divergence was greater for vegetative traits than for floral (reproductive) traits, but largely independent of the mating system. Jointly, these factors explained ~40% of the variance in evolutionary divergence. The consistency of the evolvability-divergence relationships across diverse species suggests substantial predictability of trait divergence. The results are also consistent with genetic constraints playing a role in evolutionary divergence.

Topics & Concepts

EvolvabilityBiologyEvolutionary biologyTraitDivergence (linguistics)Genetic divergenceAdaptation (eye)PopulationOutcrossingQuantitative geneticsOutbreeding depressionInbreedingGenetic variationGeneticsEcologyGenetic diversityGeneDemographyNeurosciencePollenPhilosophySociologyProgramming languageLinguisticsComputer sciencePlant and animal studiesEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesSpecies Distribution and Climate Change
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