Multi-generation selective landscapes and sub-lethal injuries in stickleback

Author:

Reimchen Thomas E1ORCID,Bergstrom Carolyn A2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Victoria , Victoria, BC , Canada

2. Department of Natural Sciences, Biology Program, University of Alaska , Juneau, AK , United States

Abstract

AbstractThe interaction between predation landscape and phenotypic variability within prey populations is of substantial significance in evolutionary biology. Extending from several decades of studies at a remote freshwater lake on Haida Gwaii, western Canada, we analyze the incidence of predator-induced sub-lethal injuries in 8,069 wild-captured threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) and using cohort analyses test whether the distribution of injuries informs the selective landscape influencing the bell-shaped frequency distribution of the traits. Our results indicate that (1) the incidence of injuries varies among phenotypes differing in the number and position of lateral plates, (2) these differences occur only among younger fish, (3) the incidence of injuries is inversely related to the estimated population frequencies of plate phenotypes, with the modal phenotype generally having the fewest injuries, (4) direct estimates of selective differentials and relative fitness based on analyses of 1,735 fish from 6 independent yearly cohorts indicates statistically informative elevated differentials in phenotypes with greater number of plates and elevated relative fitness of non-modal phenotypes, and (5) there are significant differences among yearly cohorts in strength and direction of selection, and an increased prevalence of diversifying versus stabilizing selection despite longer-term stasis (4 decades) in trait means. We conclude that the presence of multiple “optimal” phenotypes complements the renewed interests in quantifying short-term temporal or spatial variation in ecological processes in studies of fitness landscapes and intrapopulation variability.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference109 articles.

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3. Frequency-dependent selection by predators;Allen;Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences,1988

4. A comparison of startle response in two morphs of the brook stickleback (Culaea inconstans): Further evidence for a trade-off between defensive morphology and swimming ability;Andraso;Evolutionary Ecology,1997

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