Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University, MI 48824 East Lansing, USA.
BMC Evol Biol. 2014 May 29;14:113. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-14-113.
Speciation is driven by many different factors. Among those are trade-offs between different ways an organism utilizes resources, and these trade-offs can constrain the manner in which selection can optimize traits. Limited migration among allopatric populations and species interactions can also drive speciation, but here we ask if trade-offs alone are sufficient to drive speciation in the absence of other factors.
We present a model to study the effects of trade-offs on specialization and adaptive radiation in asexual organisms based solely on competition for limiting resources, where trade-offs are stronger the greater an organism's ability to utilize resources. In this model resources are perfectly substitutable, and fitness is derived from the consumption of these resources. The model contains no spatial parameters, and is therefore strictly sympatric. We quantify the degree of specialization by the number of ecotypes evolved and the niche breadth of the population, and observe that these are sensitive to resource influx and trade-offs. Resource influx has a strong effect on the degree of specialization, with a clear transition between minimal diversification at high influx and multiple species evolving at low resource influx. At low resource influx the degree of specialization further depends on the strength of the trade-offs, with more ecotypes evolving the stronger trade-offs are. The specialized organisms persist through negative frequency-dependent selection. In addition, by analyzing one of the evolutionary radiations in greater detail we demonstrate that a single mutation alone is not enough to establish a new ecotype, even though phylogenetic reconstruction identifies that mutation as the branching point. Instead, it takes a series of additional mutations to ensure the stable coexistence of the new ecotype in the background of the existing ones.
Trade-offs are sufficient to drive the evolution of specialization in sympatric asexual populations. Without trade-offs to restrain traits, generalists evolve and diversity decreases. The observation that several mutations are required to complete speciation, even when a single mutation creates the new species, highlights the gradual nature of speciation and the importance of phyletic evolution.
物种形成受多种因素驱动。其中包括生物利用资源的不同方式之间的权衡取舍,这些权衡取舍会限制选择优化特征的方式。异域种群之间有限的迁移和物种相互作用也可以推动物种形成,但在这里,我们想问的是,如果没有其他因素,仅靠权衡取舍是否足以推动物种形成。
我们提出了一个模型,仅基于对有限资源的竞争来研究权衡取舍对无性生物的特化和适应性辐射的影响,其中权衡取舍越强,生物利用资源的能力就越强。在这个模型中,资源是完全可替代的,而适应性则来自于这些资源的消耗。该模型不含空间参数,因此严格是同域的。我们通过进化出的生态型数量和种群的生态位宽度来量化特化程度,并观察到这些参数对资源流入和权衡取舍敏感。资源流入对特化程度有很强的影响,在高资源流入时,多样化程度最小,而在低资源流入时,会有多个物种进化。在低资源流入的情况下,特化程度进一步取决于权衡取舍的强度,权衡取舍越强,进化出的生态型就越多。特化生物通过负频率依赖选择得以持续存在。此外,通过更详细地分析其中一个进化辐射,我们证明了即使系统发育重建确定该突变是分支点,但仅单个突变不足以建立一个新的生态型。相反,需要一系列额外的突变来确保新生态型在现有生态型的背景下稳定共存。
权衡取舍足以驱动同域无性种群的特化进化。没有权衡取舍来限制特征,一般适应者会进化,多样性会减少。即使单个突变创造了新物种,但需要多个突变才能完成物种形成,这一观察结果突出了物种形成的渐进性质和系统发育进化的重要性。