Eco-Evolutionary Dynamics: Experiments in a Model System

Tom C. Cameron*, Stewart Plaistow, Marianne Mugabo, Stuart B. Piertney, Tim G. Benton

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

13 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Understanding the consequences of environmental change on both long- and short-term ecological and evolutionary dynamics is a basic pre-requisite for any effective conservation or management programme but inherently problematic because of the complex interplay between ecological and evolutionary processes. Components of such complexity have been described in isolation or within conceptual models on numerous occasions. What remains lacking are studies that characterise effectively the coupled ecological and evolutionary dynamics, to demonstrate feedback mechanisms that influence both phenotypic change, and its effects on population demography, in organisms with complex life histories. We present a systems-based approach that brings together multiple effects that 'shape' an organism's life history (e.g. direct and delayed life-history consequences of environmental variation) and the resulting eco-evolutionary population dynamics. Using soil mites in microcosms, we characterise ecological, phenotypic and evolutionary dynamics in replicated populations in response to experimental manipulations of environment (e.g. the competitive environment, female age, male quality). Our results demonstrate that population dynamics are complex and are affected by both plastic and evolved responses to past and present environments, and that the emergent population dynamic itself shaped the landscape for natural selection to act on in subsequent generations. Evolutionary and ecological effects on dynamics can therefore be almost impossible to partition, which needs to be considered and appreciated in research, management and conservation.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAdvances in Ecological Research
Subtitle of host publicationEco-Evolutionary Dynamics
EditorsJ MoyaLarano, J Rowntree, G Woodward
Place of PublicationSan Diego
PublisherElsevier Academic Press
Pages171-206
Number of pages36
Volume50
ISBN (Print)978-0-12-801374-8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Publication series

NameAdvances in Ecological Research
PublisherElsevier Academic Press Inc
Volume50
ISSN (Print)0065-2504

Keywords

  • fisheries-induced evolution
  • life-history evolution
  • adaptive phenotypic plasticity
  • maternal effect hypothesis
  • ecological time-scales
  • wild bird population
  • rapid evolution
  • fish populations
  • environmental variability
  • developmental thresholds
  • eco-evolutionary
  • parental effects
  • maternal
  • phenotype
  • body size
  • offspring
  • population dynamics
  • life histories
  • harvesting
  • natural selection
  • evolutionary rescue

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