Published on 19 September 2013 |
Data from: Parallelism isn't perfect: could disease and flooding drive a life history anomaly in Trinidadian guppies?
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Nonparallel evolution, where independent populations occupy similar environments but show phenotypic differences, can uncover previously ignored selective factors. We investigated a nonparallelism in the life-history strategy of a Trinidadian guppy population, a system famous for parallel adaptation to differences in predation risk. We tested the hypothesis that high mortality drives an observed fast life-history pattern (i.e., earlier maturation and more frequent reproductive events) that is atypical for a low-predation environment. Using mark-recapture techniques, we compared neighboring low-predation populations, finding significantly higher mortality rates in the population with atypical life-history traits. Mortality was elevated during the wet season, when flooding was common. Moreover, individuals from the anomalous population were more likely to transition from healthy to infected disease states. Our results stand out against previous patterns observed in this system, indicating that higher mortality caused by disease and flooding may have selected for a faster life history. Thus, we highlight that even in systems famous for parallel adaptation, variation in selective pressures can result in nonparallel phenotypic evolution.
Citations (1)
- https://doi.org/10.1086/674611DataCite MDC
Cited on 18 December 2013
Weight: 1.00
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Publication Details
Subfield
Nature and Landscape Conservation
Field
Environmental Science
Domain
Physical Sciences
Confidence Score
46%
Source
Scholar Data Model