|
|
| Research article summary (published 30 Dec 2006): |
Of chickens and eggs: diverging propagule size of iteroparous and semelparous organisms.
Full Abstract
Interactive effects of two or more life-history traits on fitness have the potential to create suites of coadapted traits. Propagule (egg or seed) size is one such trait that is believed to have undergone coadaptation with other traits. Phylogenetic analyses of salmonid fishes have revealed an association between large eggs and semelparity, leading to the question of which came first. It has been hypothesized that an increased egg size would have increased juvenile relative to adult survival, favoring a subsequent increase in reproductive effort and eventually semelparity. Others have suggested that this is insufficient to cause a shift in parity, implying to the contrary that semelparity gave rise to larger eggs. In a previous study we showed that environmental unpredictability might select for production of larger propagules. Here we use simulations to directly model how propagule size evolves in response to environmental unpredictability with varying degrees of iteroparity. Our results demonstrate that environmental unpredictability causes pronounced propagule size divergence between iteroparous and purely semelparous species in taxa with a fixed age at maturity (e.g., pure annual species). However, even rare incidents of repeat breeding are sufficient to reduce selection for larger propagules substantially and thus divergence. Furthermore, introducing variation in age at maturity within propagule size genotypes has evolutionary effects similar to that of repeat breeding. Environmental unpredictability is thus unlikely to provide a general alternative explanation for the observed egg size divergence between iteroparous and semelparous salmonids.
Author information
Author/s: Einum, Sigurd (S); Fleming, Ian A (IA);
Affiliation: Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, Tungasletta 2, NO-7485 Trondheim, Norway. sigurd.einum(-atsign-)nina.no
Journal and publication information
Publication Type: Comparative Study; Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Journal: Evolution; international journal of organic evolution (Evolution), published in United States. (Language: eng)
Reference: 2007-Jan; vol 61 (issue 1) : pp 232-8
Dates: Created 2007/02/15; Completed 2007/03/26; Revised 2008/06/04;
PMID: 17300442, status: MEDLINE (last retrieved date: 2/18/2009)
Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.
External Links for this article
(including full text providers, if available):
Click Electronic Full-text Provider Links to see options for finding the electronic full text links to this article. Note there may be a subscription or fee required for access to the full text. See our FAQ for information on finding FREE full text articles.
This article may also be located in paper journal collections available in many libraries. Use the Journal and Publication Information above to find the full article.
MeSH headings (categories)
This article was linked to the MeSH Headings (categories) shown below.
Note: Bold headings indicate primary MeSH headings or qualifiers.
Related articles
These are the most related articles currently in our database:
- Climate change and evolution: disentangling environmental and genetic responses.
30 Dec 2007 - Speciation: more likely through a genetic or through a learned habitat preference?
20 Jul 2005 - Adaptation to environmental stress: a rare or frequent driver of speciation?
29 Jun 2005 - Counteracting selective regimes and host preference evolution in ecotypes of two species of walking-sticks.
30 Oct 2005 - Learning and colonization of new niches: a first step toward speciation.
30 Dec 2003 - Evolutionary biology: the power of natural selection.
15 Feb 2005 - The biological limitations of transcriptomics in elucidating stress and stress responses.
29 Jun 2005 - Evolution in heterogeneous environments and the potential of maintenance of genetic variation in traits of adaptive significance.
30 Jan 2005 - Adaptive evolution of bindin in the genus Heliocidaris is correlated with the shift to direct development.
29 Sep 2003 - Trade-offs and the evolution of virulence of microparasites: do details matter?
30 Aug 2003
Related Article Map
Legend:
- FREE Full text Article.
- Abstract only.
- Title only. More help.
See a larger map of 100+ related articles.