4.7 Article

Historical contingency and the role of post-invasion evolution in alternative community states

期刊

ECOLOGY
卷 103, 期 7, 页码 -

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3711

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biological invasions; convergence and divergence; eco-evolutionary dynamics; experimental evolution; historical contingency; intraspecific variability

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  1. Rutgers University

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Historical contingency plays an important role in evolutionary biology and community ecology. This study found that initial differences in species abundances among communities persisted over time and were influenced by evolutionary history. Additionally, ecological drift may contribute to community change. These transient alternative states in community structure can have important functional consequences and deserve greater attention in understanding the role of evolution.
Historical contingency has long figured prominently in the conceptual frameworks of evolutionary biology and community ecology. Evolutionary biologists typically consider the effects of chance mutation and historical contingency in driving divergence and convergence of traits in populations, whereas ecologists instead are often interested in the role of historical contingency in community assembly and succession. Although genetic differences among individuals in populations can influence community interactions, variability among populations of the same species has received relatively little attention for its potential role in community assembly and succession. We used a community-level study of experimental evolution in two compositionally different assemblages of protists and rotifers to explore whether initial differences in species abundances among communities attributed to differences in evolutionary history, persisted as species that continued to evolve over time. In each assemblage, we observed significant convergence between two invaded treatments initially differing in evolutionary history over an observation period equal to similar to 40-80 generations for most species. Nonetheless, community structure failed to converge completely across all invaded treatments within an assemblage to a single structure. This suggests that whereas the species in the assemblage represent a common selective regime, differences in populations reflecting their evolutionary history can produce long-lasting transient alternative community states. In one assemblage, we also observed increasing within-treatment variability among replicate communities over time, suggesting that ecological drift may be another factor contributing to community change. Although subtle, these transient alternative states, in which communities differed in the abundance of interacting species, could nonetheless have important functional consequences, suggesting that the role of evolution in driving these states deserves greater attention.

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