2018 ESA Annual Meeting (August 5 -- 10)

COS 23-10 - Ecological opportunity and predator-prey interactions: Linking eco-evolutionary processes and diversification in adaptive radiations

Tuesday, August 7, 2018: 11:10 AM
333-334, New Orleans Ernest N. Morial Convention Center
Mikael Pontarp and Owen L. Petchey, Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Background/Question/Methods

Much of life’s diversity has arisen through ecological opportunity and adaptive radiations, but the mechanistic underpinning of such diversification is not fully understood. Competition and predation can affect adaptive radiations, but contrasting theoretical and empirical results show that they can both promote and interrupt diversification. A mechanistic understanding of the link between microevolutionary processes and macroevolutionary patterns is thus needed, especially in trophic communities. Here, we use a trait-based eco-evolutionary model to investigate the mechanisms linking competition, predation, and adaptive radiations.

Results/Conclusions

By combining available micro-evolutionary theory and simulations of adaptive radiations we show that intraspecific competition is crucial for diversification as it induces disruptive selection, in particular in early phases of radiation. The diversification rate is however decreased in later phases due to interspecific competition as niche availability, and population sizes are decreased. We provide new insight into how predation tends to have a negative effect on prey diversification through decreased population sizes, decreased disruptive selection and through the exclusion of prey from parts of niche space. The seemingly disparate effects of competition and predation on adaptive radiations, listed in the literature, may thus be acting and interacting in the same adaptive radiation at different relative strength as the radiation progresses.