Rapid evolution of diet choice in an introduced population of Trinidadian guppies

Author:

Smith Shawna1,Mohamed Amina12,Amaral Jeferson Ribeiro12,Kusi Nana1,Smith Alexander1,Gordon Swanne P.12,López-Sepulcre Andrés12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63130, USA

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA

Abstract

Eco-evolutionary theory has brought an interest in the rapid evolution of functional traits. Among them, diet is an important determinant of ecosystem structure, affecting food web dynamics and nutrient cycling. However, it is largely unknown whether diet, or diet preference, has a hereditary basis and can evolve on contemporary timescales. Here, we study the diet preferences of Trinidadian guppies Poecilia reticulata collected from directly below an introduction site of fish transplanted from a high-predation environment into a low predation site where their densities and competition increased. Behavioural assays on F2 common garden descendants of the ancestral and derived populations showed that diet preference has rapidly evolved in the introduced population in only 12 years (approx. 36 generations). Specifically, we show that the preference for high-quality food generally found in high-predation guppies is lost in the newly derived low-predation population, who show an inertia toward the first encountered food. This result is predicted by theory stating that organisms should evolve less selective diets under higher competition. Demonstrating that diet preference can show rapid and adaptive evolution is important to our understanding of eco-evolutionary feedbacks and the role of evolution in ecosystem dynamics.

Funder

Washington University in St. Louis

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference34 articles.

1. Travis J, Reznick D, Bassar RD, López-Sepulcre A, Ferriere R, Coulson T. 2014 Chapter One - Do eco-evo feedbacks help us understand nature? Answers from studies of the Trinidadian Guppy. In Advances in ecological research (eds J Moya-Laraño, J Rowntree, G Woodward), pp. 1-40. New York, NY: Academic Press.

2. Eco-evolutionary Dynamics

3. Towards a more precise – and accurate – view of eco‐evolution

4. Eco-evolutionary feedbacks in community and ecosystem ecology: interactions between the ecological theatre and the evolutionary play

5. Toward an integration of evolutionary biology and ecosystem science

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