Linking Ecological Specialization to Its Macroevolutionary Consequences: An Example with Passerine Nest Type

Author:

Zenil-Ferguson Rosana1,McEntee Jay P2,Burleigh J Gordon3,Duckworth Renée A4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Kentucky , 101 T.H. Morgan Building, Lexington, KY 40506 , USA

2. Department of Biology, Missouri State University , 901 S. National Ave., Springfield, MO 65897 , USA

3. Department of Biology, University of Florida , 220 Bartram Hall, P.O. Box 118525, Gainesville, FL 32611 , USA

4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona , 1041 E. Lowell St., Tucson, AZ 85721 , USA

Abstract

Abstract A long-standing hypothesis in evolutionary biology is that the evolution of resource specialization can lead to an evolutionary dead end, where specialists have low diversification rates and limited ability to evolve into generalists. In recent years, advances in comparative methods investigating trait-based differences associated with diversification have enabled more robust tests of this idea and have found mixed support. We test the evolutionary dead end hypothesis by estimating net diversification rate differences associated with nest-type specialization among 3224 species of passerine birds. In particular, we test whether the adoption of hole-nesting, a nest-type specialization that decreases predation, results in reduced diversification rates relative to nesting outside of holes. Further, we examine whether evolutionary transitions to the specialist hole-nesting state have been more frequent than transitions out of hole-nesting. Using diversification models that accounted for background rate heterogeneity and different extinction rate scenarios, we found that hole-nesting specialization was not associated with diversification rate differences. Furthermore, contrary to the assumption that specialists rarely evolve into generalists, we found that transitions out of hole-nesting occur more frequently than transitions into hole-nesting. These results suggest that interspecific competition may limit adoption of hole-nesting, but that such competition does not result in limited diversification of hole-nesters. In conjunction with other recent studies using robust comparative methods, our results add to growing evidence that evolutionary dead ends are not a typical outcome of resource specialization. [Cavity nesting; diversification; hidden-state models; passerines; resource specialization.]

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference102 articles.

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