TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmental induction and phenotypic retention of adaptive maternal effects
AU - Badyaev, Alexander V.
AU - Oh, Kevin P.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank R. Duckworth, E. Landeen, J. Rutkowska, R. Young and three reviewers for very helpful comments and suggestions on previous versions of this manuscript, many assistants for help in the field at both study sites, E. Lindstedt, K. Soetaert, C. Secomb, and J. Hubbard for molecular sexing analyses, R. Young and D. Seaman for measuring oocyte growth, T. Ham-stra for conducting nest fumigation for mites, and R. McCue and the personnel of the Vigilante MiniStorage of Missoula, Montana for allowing us to work on their property for the last twelve years. This work was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation and by the David and Lucille Packard Fellowship.
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - Background. The origin of complex adaptations is one of the most controversial questions in biology. Environmental induction of novel phenotypes, where phenotypic retention of adaptive developmental variation is enabled by organismal complexity and homeostasis, can be a starting point in the evolution of some adaptations, but empirical examples are rare. Comparisons of populations that differ in historical recurrence of environmental induction can offer insight into its evolutionary significance, and recent colonization of North America by the house finch (Carpodacus mexicanus) provides such an opportunity. Results. In both native (southern Arizona) and newly established (northern Montana, 18 generations) populations, breeding female finches exhibit the same complex adaptation - a sex-bias in ovulation sequence - in response to population-specific environmental stimulus of differing recurrence. We document that, in the new population, the adaptation is induced by a novel environment during females' first breeding and is subsequently retained across breeding attempts. In the native population, first-breeding females expressed a precise adaptive response to a recurrent environmental stimulus without environmental induction. We document strong selection on environmental cue recognition in both populations and find that rearrangement of the same proximate mechanism - clustering of oocytes that become males and females - can enable an adaptive response to distinct environmental stimuli. Conclusion. The results show that developmental plasticity induced by novel environmental conditions confers significant fitness advantages to both maternal and offspring generations and might play an important role not only in the successful establishment of this invasive species across the widest ecological range of extant birds, but also can link environmental induction and genetic inheritance in the evolution of novel adaptations.
AB - Background. The origin of complex adaptations is one of the most controversial questions in biology. Environmental induction of novel phenotypes, where phenotypic retention of adaptive developmental variation is enabled by organismal complexity and homeostasis, can be a starting point in the evolution of some adaptations, but empirical examples are rare. Comparisons of populations that differ in historical recurrence of environmental induction can offer insight into its evolutionary significance, and recent colonization of North America by the house finch (Carpodacus mexicanus) provides such an opportunity. Results. In both native (southern Arizona) and newly established (northern Montana, 18 generations) populations, breeding female finches exhibit the same complex adaptation - a sex-bias in ovulation sequence - in response to population-specific environmental stimulus of differing recurrence. We document that, in the new population, the adaptation is induced by a novel environment during females' first breeding and is subsequently retained across breeding attempts. In the native population, first-breeding females expressed a precise adaptive response to a recurrent environmental stimulus without environmental induction. We document strong selection on environmental cue recognition in both populations and find that rearrangement of the same proximate mechanism - clustering of oocytes that become males and females - can enable an adaptive response to distinct environmental stimuli. Conclusion. The results show that developmental plasticity induced by novel environmental conditions confers significant fitness advantages to both maternal and offspring generations and might play an important role not only in the successful establishment of this invasive species across the widest ecological range of extant birds, but also can link environmental induction and genetic inheritance in the evolution of novel adaptations.
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U2 - 10.1186/1471-2148-8-3
DO - 10.1186/1471-2148-8-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 18182118
AN - SCOPUS:38849196112
SN - 1471-2148
VL - 8
JO - BMC Evolutionary Biology
JF - BMC Evolutionary Biology
IS - 1
M1 - 3
ER -