Evolution repeats itself in replicate long-term studies in the wild

Author:

Nosil Patrik12ORCID,de Carvalho Clarissa F.3ORCID,Villoutreix Romain2ORCID,Zamorano Laura S.12ORCID,Sinclair-Waters Marion2ORCID,Planidin Nicholas P.2ORCID,Parchman Thomas L.4ORCID,Feder Jeffrey5ORCID,Gompert Zach6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Theoretical and Experimental Ecology (SETE), CNRS, 2 route du CNRS, 09200 Moulis, France.

2. CEFE, Université de Montpellier, CNRS, EPHE, IRD, Montpellier, France.

3. Departamento de Ecologia e Biologia Evolutiva, UNIFESP, Diadema 09972-270, Brazil.

4. Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89557, USA.

5. Department of Biology, Notre Dame University, South Bend, IN 11111, USA.

6. Department of Biology, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84322, USA.

Abstract

The extent to which evolution is repeatable remains debated. Here, we study changes over time in the frequency of cryptic color-pattern morphs in 10 replicate long-term field studies of a stick insect, each spanning at least a decade (across 30 years of total data). We find predictable “up-and-down” fluctuations in stripe frequency in all populations, representing repeatable evolutionary dynamics based on standing genetic variation. A field experiment demonstrates that these fluctuations involve negative frequency-dependent natural selection (NFDS). These fluctuations rely on demographic and selective variability that pushes populations away from equilibrium, such that they can reliably move back toward it via NFDS. Last, we show that the origin of new cryptic forms is associated with multiple structural genomic variants such that which mutations arise affects evolution at larger temporal scales. Thus, evolution from existing variation is predictable and repeatable, but mutation adds complexity even for traits evolving deterministically under natural selection.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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