학술논문

Predicting evolutionary responses to interspecific interference in the wild
Document Type
article
Source
Ecology Letters. 23(2)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Ecology
Aggression
Biological Evolution
Reproduction
Sympatry
Territoriality
Character displacement
competitor recognition
evolutionary simulation
individual-based model
interference competition
heterospecific aggression
interspecific aggression
reproductive interference
species recognition
Ecological Applications
Evolutionary Biology
Ecological applications
Environmental management
Language
Abstract
Many interspecifically territorial species interfere with each other reproductively, and in some cases, aggression towards heterospecifics may be an adaptive response to interspecific mate competition. This hypothesis was recently formalised in an agonistic character displacement (ACD) model which predicts that species should evolve to defend territories against heterospecific rivals above a threshold level of reproductive interference. To test this prediction, we parameterised the model with field estimates of reproductive interference for 32 sympatric damselfly populations and ran evolutionary simulations. Asymmetries in reproductive interference made the outcome inherently unpredictable in some cases, but 80% of the model's stable outcomes matched levels of heterospecific aggression in the field, significantly exceeding chance expectations. In addition to bolstering the evidence for ACD, this paper introduces a new, predictive approach to testing character displacement theory that, if applied to other systems, could help in resolving long-standing questions about the importance of character displacement processes in nature.