Projects per year
Abstract
Recent theory predicts that increased phenotypic plasticity can facilitate adaptation as traits respond to selection. When genetic adaptation alters the social environment, socially mediated plasticity could cause co-evolutionary feedback dynamics that increase adaptive potential. We tested this by asking whether neural gene expression in a recently arisen, adaptive morph of the field cricket Teleogryllus oceanicus is more responsive to the social environment than the ancestral morph. Silent males (flatwings) rapidly spread in a Hawaiian population subject to acoustically orienting parasitoids, changing the population's acoustic environment. Experimental altering crickets’ acoustic environments during rearing revealed broad, plastic changes in gene expression. However, flatwing genotypes showed increased socially mediated plasticity, whereas normal-wing genotypes exhibited negligible expression plasticity. Increased plasticity in flatwing crickets suggests a coevolutionary process coupling socially flexible gene expression with the abrupt spread of flatwing. Our results support predictions that phenotypic plasticity should rapidly evolve to be more pronounced during early phases of adaptation.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 546-556 |
Journal | Ecology Letters |
Volume | 21 |
Issue number | 4 |
Early online date | 14 Feb 2018 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 9 Mar 2018 |
Keywords
- Adaptation
- Coevolution
- Genetic assmiliation
- Genomic invasion
- Phenotypic plasticity
- Rapid evolution
- Social environment
- Teleogryllus oceanicus
- Transcriptomics
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Increased socially mediated plasticity in gene expression accompanies rapid adaptive evolution'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 3 Finished
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Genomic Invasion: Genomic Invasion and the Role of Behaviour in Rapid Evolution.
Bailey, N. W. (PI)
1/10/14 → 4/12/20
Project: Standard
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Genomic Evolution in Real Time: Genomic evolution in real time: causes and consequences of an adaptive mutation in the wild
Bailey, N. W. (PI) & Ritchie, M. G. (CoI)
9/01/12 → 8/01/15
Project: Standard
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Sexual Selection of Field Crickets: Social Learning and Sexual selection in field crickets
Bailey, N. W. (PI)
1/04/10 → 31/03/13
Project: Fellowship
Profiles
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Nathan William Bailey
- School of Biology - Professor of Evolutionary Biology
- Centre for Biological Diversity
- Institute of Behavioural and Neural Sciences
- St Andrews Bioinformatics Unit
Person: Academic
Datasets
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Increased socially-mediated plasticity in gene expression accompanies rapid adaptive evolution (dataset)
Pascoal, S. C. M. (Creator), Liu, X. (Creator), Fang, Y. (Creator), Paterson, S. (Creator), Ritchie, M. G. (Creator), Rockliffe, N. (Creator), Zuk, M. (Creator) & Bailey, N. W. (Creator), National Center for Biotechnology Information, 23 Sept 2016
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bioproject/?term=PRJNA344019
Dataset