Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/25943
Appears in Collections:Biological and Environmental Sciences Journal Articles
Peer Review Status: Refereed
Title: Environmental variation causes different (co)evolutionary routes to the same adaptive destination across parasite populations
Other Titles: Adaptation and coevolution across environments
Author(s): Auld, Stuart
Brand, June
Contact Email: s.k.auld@stir.ac.uk
Keywords: Adaptation
coevolution
experimental evolution
host-parasite interactions
Issue Date: Nov-2017
Date Deposited: 2-Oct-2017
Citation: Auld S & Brand J (2017) Environmental variation causes different (co)evolutionary routes to the same adaptive destination across parasite populations [Adaptation and coevolution across environments]. Evolution Letters, 1 (5), pp. 245-254. https://doi.org/10.1002/evl3.27
Abstract: Epidemics are engines for host-parasite coevolution, where parasite adaptation to hosts drives reciprocal adaptation in host populations. A key challenge is to understand whether parasite adaptation and any underlying evolution and coevolution is repeatable across ecologically realistic populations that experience different environmental conditions, or if each population follows a completely unique evolutionary path. We established twenty replicate pond populations comprising an identical suite of genotypes of crustacean host, Daphnia magna, and inoculum of their parasite, Pasteuria ramosa. Using a time-shift experiment, we compared parasite infection traits before and after epidemics and linked patterns of parasite evolution with shifts in host genotype frequencies. Parasite adaptation to the sympatric suite of host genotypes came at a cost of poorer performance on foreign genotypes across populations and environments. However, this consistent pattern of parasite adaptation was driven by different types of frequency-dependent selection that was contingent on an ecologically relevant environmental treatment (whether or not there was physical mixing of water within ponds). In unmixed ponds, large epidemics drove rapid and strong host-parasite coevolution. In mixed ponds, epidemics were smaller and host evolution was driven mainly by the mixing treatment itself; here, host evolution and parasite evolution were clear, but coevolution was absent. Population mixing breaks an otherwise robust coevolutionary cycle. These findings advance our understanding of the repeatability of (co)evolution across noisy, ecologically realistic populations.
DOI Link: 10.1002/evl3.27
Rights: © 2017 The Author(s). Evolution Letters published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Society for the Study of Evolution (SSE) and European Society for Evolutionary Biology (ESEB). This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Licence URL(s): http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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