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Plasticity and local adaptation in invasive species Recap of last time We discussed THE ten hypotheses We had a discussion about pre-adaptation.. Agreed that some level of preadaptation is required for successful introduction How do introduced species succeed in new environments? “Sorting” of pre-adapted genotypes Phenotypic plasticity allows survival in multiple environments Post-introduction evolution of locally adapted genotypes Three questions: Is there a relationship between plasticity and invasiveness? 1. Are invasive species more plastic than non-invasive species? 2. Does adaptive plasticity evolve in invasive species? 3. Do invasive species become locally adapted? Phenotypic plasticity defined The ability of a genotype to express different phenotypes in different environments (Bradshaw 1965, Schlichting 1986, Scheiner 1993, Pigliucci 2001, 2005) Genetically controlled Refers to a specific trait, not an organism** Not always adaptive, but adaptive plasticity is often of interest to ecologists 11. General purpose genotypes Herbert Baker, 1965, Genetics of Colonizing Species Species may become invasive BECAUSE they are phenotypically plastic -ORFollowing introduction, species may evolve increased plasticity Chlorophyll content What does plasticity look like? Norm of reaction diagram Chlorophyll content is a plastic trait- phenotype changes in response to the environment Trait plasticity can lead to stable fitness across environments Fitness Plasticity in traits, constant fitness Fitness is maintained across habitats It is possible to have plasticity for plant traits, and no plasticity in fitness traits Chlorophyll content Not non-genetic Heritability is as other traits Evidenced by genetic variation for plasticity Some families are more plastic than others Family x Environment interaction Local adaptation The existence of genotypes that are well suited to local biotic and abiotic conditions Created through the process of natural selection Local adaptation may require phenotypic plasticity e.g. highly variable environments Fitness What does it look like? Each species has higher fitness in the area it is from G x E interaction Isn’t local adaptation inevitable? Not guaranteed: selection too unpredictable genetic variation too small selection may be swamped by gene flow adaptation may be prevented by phenotypic plasticity selection cannot act on genes it can’t “see” Is there a relationship between plasticity and invasiveness? Two kinds of plasticity Invasive Non-invasive 1. Are invasive species more plastic than non-invasive species? Compare invasive exotic species with noninvasive exotic species + + + 0 0 Compare invasive exotic species with related native species + + + 0 Compare invasive exotic species with unrelated native species + + + + 0 11. YES Jack-and-Master 2. Does adaptive plasticity evolve in invasive species? Chlorophyll content Not non-genetic Family x Environment interaction Would be expected to be favored when: Unpredictable environments (disruptive selection in space and time) Stabilizing selection on different genotypes in a single environment- more than one phenotype is adaptive Strong directional selection on a trait for which there is no genetic variation available THE EVOLUTION OF PLASTICITY “chlorophyll” + or - “plastic” “chlorophyll +” One gene can be expressed differently in different environments “chlorophyll -” Does adaptive plasticity evolve in invasive species? Compare invasive populations with known source of invaders no data?? Compare invasive populations with a reasonable sample of native populations +++++++000000- + Reasonable sample Leger and Rice 2003 Master-of-some Invasive Native 3. Do invasive species become locally adapted? YES Wing size R.B. Huey and G.W. Gilchrist Latitude 3. Do invasive species become locally adapted? YES 3. Do invasive species become locally adapted? YES Does evolutionary change CAUSE invasion? we don’t know have to track invasions as they progress Initial plasticity, followed by adaptation Chance mutations affect ability to plastically respond to rare (or absent) stimuli Selection does not remove these mutants from the population Eventually, may get plants with fixed response to a particular condition OR, there is a cost to maintaining plasticity, therefore it is lost Genetic assimilation general purpose genotype “plastic” “high” “high” “low” “low” “low” PEAVINE PEAK Are genotypes adapting to high-elevation environments? Results to date: no (but there is adaptation to lowelevation environments) Survival at high elevations appears to be random (not related to genotype or environment where you were collected) Once plants survive, fitness is identical to lowelevation sites Seems like a great place for plasticity to evolve Pre-adaptation Adaptive plasticity = good Local adaptation may follow Summary Introduced species can survive a complex new environment if: at least some pre-adapted genotypes are introduced (“sorting”) at least some genotypes can tolerate new environments through phenotypic plasticity species evolves increased plasticity postintroduction species evolves locally adapted genotypes (?)