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Reproductive character displacement shapes a spatially structured petal color polymorphism in Leavenworthia stylosa

Character displacement is a potentially important process driving trait evolution and species diversification. Floral traits may experience character displacement in response to pollinator-mediated competition (ecological character displacement) or the risk of forming hybrids with reduced fitness (r...

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Published in:Evolution 2015-05, Vol.69 (5), p.1191-1207
Main Authors: Norton, Nicholas A., Fernando, M. Thilina R., Herlihy, Christopher R., Busch, Jeremiah W.
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Fernando, M. Thilina R.
Herlihy, Christopher R.
Busch, Jeremiah W.
description Character displacement is a potentially important process driving trait evolution and species diversification. Floral traits may experience character displacement in response to pollinator-mediated competition (ecological character displacement) or the risk of forming hybrids with reduced fitness (reproductive character displacement). We test these and alternative hypotheses to explain a yellow-white petal color polymorphism in Leavenworthia stylosa, where yellow morphs are spatially associated with a white-petaled congener (Leavenworthia exigua) that produces hybrids with complete pollen sterility. A reciprocal transplant experiment found limited evidence of local adaptation of yellow color morphs via increased survival and seed set. Pollinator observations revealed that Leavenworthia attract various pollinators that generally favor white petals and exhibit color constancy. Pollen limitation experiments showed that yellow petals do not alleviate competition for pollination. Interspecific pollinator movements were infrequent and low hybridization rates (~0.40−0.85%) were found in each morph, with natural rates likely being lower. Regardless, hybridization rates were significantly higher in white morphs of L. stylosa, yielding a small selection coefficient of s = 0.0042 against this phenotype in sympatry with L. exigua. These results provide support for RCD as a mechanism contributing to the pattern of petal color polymorphism in L. stylosa.
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subjects Biological evolution
Brassicaceae - genetics
Carotenoids
Character displacement
Color
Competition
Congeners
Displacement
Ecological competition
Ecological genetics
Environmental risk
Evolution
Evolution, Molecular
Evolutionary biology
Flowers & plants
Flowers - genetics
Fruits
Genetic Speciation
Genotype & phenotype
Hybridization
Hybrids
Interspecific
Leavenworthia stylosa
Petals
Phenotypes
Pigmentation - genetics
Plant Infertility - genetics
Plant reproduction
Plants
Pollen
Pollinating insects
Pollination
Pollinators
Polymorphism
Polymorphism, Genetic
Seed set
Selection, Genetic
Species
Sterility
Sympatry
title Reproductive character displacement shapes a spatially structured petal color polymorphism in Leavenworthia stylosa
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