Fluctuating selection maintains distinct species phenotypes in an ecological community in the wild

Author:

Stroud James T.123ORCID,Moore Michael P.4,Langerhans R. Brian5ORCID,Losos Jonathan B.26

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332

2. Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO 63130

3. Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199

4. Department of Integrative Biology, University of Colorado Denver, Denver, CO 80217

5. Department of Biological Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695

6. Living Earth Collaborative, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO 63130

Abstract

Species’ phenotypic characteristics often remain unchanged over long stretches of geological time. Stabilizing selection—in which fitness is highest for intermediate phenotypes and lowest for the extremes—has been widely invoked as responsible for this pattern. At the community level, such stabilizing selection acting individually on co-occurring species is expected to produce a rugged fitness landscape on which different species occupy distinct fitness peaks. However, even with an explosion of microevolutionary field studies over the past four decades, evidence for persistent stabilizing selection driving long-term stasis is lacking. Nonetheless, biologists continue to invoke stabilizing selection as a major factor explaining macroevolutionary patterns. Here, by directly measuring natural selection in the wild, we identified a complex community-wide fitness surface in which fourAnolislizard species each occupy a distinct fitness peak close to their mean phenotype. The presence of local fitness optima within species, and fitness valleys between species, presents a barrier to adaptive evolutionary change and acts to maintain species differences through time. However, instead of continuously operating stabilizing selection, we found that species were maintained on these peaks by the combination of many independent periods among which selection fluctuated in form, strength, direction, or existence and in which stabilizing selection rarely occurred. Our results suggest that lack of substantial phenotypic evolutionary change through time may be the result of selection, but not persistent stabilizing selection as classically envisioned.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference89 articles.

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