O'Connor, Louise M. J. and Fugère, Vincent and Gonzalez, Andrew (2020) Evolutionary Rescue Is Mediated by the History of Selection and Dispersal in Diversifying Metacommunities. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 8. ISSN 2296-701X
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Abstract
Rapid evolution can sometimes prevent population extirpation in stressful environments, but the conditions leading to “evolutionary rescue” in metacommunities are unclear. Here we studied the eco-evolutionary response of microbial metacommunities adapting to selection by the antibiotic streptomycin. Our experiment tested how the history of antibiotic selection and contrasting modes of dispersal influenced diversification and subsequent evolutionary rescue in microbial metacommunities undergoing adaptive radiation. We first tracked the change in diversity and density of Pseudomonas fluorescens morphotypes selected on a gradient of antibiotic stress. We then examined the recovery of these metacommunities following abrupt application of a high concentration of streptomycin lethal to the ancestral organisms. We show that dispersal increases diversity within the stressed metacommunities, that exposure to stress alters diversification dynamics, and that community composition, dispersal, and past exposure to stress mediate the speed at which evolutionary rescue occurs, but not the final outcome of recovery in abundance and diversity. These findings extend recent experiments on evolutionary rescue to the case of metacommunities undergoing adaptive diversification, and should motivate new theory on this question. Our findings are also relevant to evolutionary conservation biology and research on antimicrobial resistance.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | Oalibrary Press > Multidisciplinary |
Depositing User: | Managing Editor |
Date Deposited: | 28 Sep 2023 09:12 |
Last Modified: | 28 Sep 2023 09:12 |
URI: | http://asian.go4publish.com/id/eprint/2546 |