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Spatial heterogeneity in pH, body size and habitat size generates ecological opportunity in an evolutionary radiation.

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Much of the biological diversity we see today is thought to be the product of evolutionary radiation, the rapid proliferation of species from a single ancestor into multiple discrete forms.… Click to show full abstract

Much of the biological diversity we see today is thought to be the product of evolutionary radiation, the rapid proliferation of species from a single ancestor into multiple discrete forms. Spatial heterogeneity in environmental variables has been proposed as creating the necessary ecological opportunity to stimulate evolutionary radiation. However, the ecological mechanisms generating and maintaining diversity in spatially-heterogeneous environments are not fully understood. We investigated the role of strong spatial heterogeneity in generating ecological opportunity in an evolutionary radiation of freshwater populations of the three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus L.) on the island of North Uist using a spatially explicit Bayesian model. We identified pH, loch surface area and body size as predictors of variance in the number of lateral plates that comprise anti-predator armour in G. aculeatus. An East-West gradient of pH, a product of the distinctive environment of North Uist, generates a robust selective environment facilitating G. aculeatus evolutionary radiation. Larger lochs were associated with atypical phenotypes, possibly related to larger population sizes and greater selection efficiency. An association between pH and lateral plate number is likely an effect of body size, with a positive relationship between body size and lateral plate number that is mediated by swimming efficiency in G. aculeatus. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Keywords: spatial heterogeneity; size; body size; evolutionary radiation

Journal Title: Journal of fish biology
Year Published: 2022

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