期刊论文详细信息
Ecology and Evolution
Ancestral ecological regime shapes reaction to food limitation in the Least Killifish, Heterandria formosa
Joseph Travis1  Jeff Leips2  Anja Felmy3 
[1] Department of Biological Science Florida State University Tallahassee FL USA;Department of Biological Sciences University of Maryland Baltimore County Baltimore MD USA;Department of Zoology University of Oxford Oxford UK;
关键词: density‐dependent selection;    life history;    local adaptation;    maternal effects;    offspring size;    phenotypic plasticity;   
DOI  :  10.1002/ece3.7490
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Abstract Populations with different densities often show genetically based differences in life histories. The divergent life histories could be driven by several agents of selection, one of which is variation in per‐capita food levels. Its relationship with population density is complex, as it depends on overall food availability, individual metabolic demand, and food‐independent factors potentially affecting density, such as predation intensity. Here, we present a case study of two populations of a small live‐bearing freshwater fish, one characterized by high density, low predation risk, low overall food availability, and presumably low per‐capita food levels, and the other by low density, high predation risk, high overall food availability, and presumably high per‐capita food levels. Using a laboratory experiment, we examined whether fish from these populations respond differently to food limitation, and whether size at birth, a key trait with respect to density variation in this species, is associated with any such differential responses. While at the lower food level growth was slower, body size smaller, maturation delayed, and survival reduced in both populations, these fitness costs were smaller in fish from the high‐density population. At low food, only 15% of high‐density fish died, compared to 75% of low‐density fish. This difference was much smaller at high food (0% vs. 15% mortality). The increased survival of high‐density fish may, at least partly, be due to their larger size at birth. Moreover, being larger at birth enabled fish to mature relatively early even at the lower food level. We demonstrate that sensitivities to food limitation differ between study populations, consistent with selection for a greater ability to tolerate low per‐capita food availability in the high‐density population. While we cannot preclude other agents of selection from operating in these populations simultaneously, our results suggest that variation in per‐capita food levels is one of those agents.

【 授权许可】

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