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Factors that influence the distribution, abundance, and diversification of species can simultaneously affect multiple evolutionary lineages within or across communities. These include changes to the environment or inter‐specific ecological interactions that cause ranges of multiple species to contract, expand, or fragment. Such processes predict temporally clustered evolutionary events across species,...
Artificial selection is a promising approach to manipulate microbial communities. Here, we report the outcome of two artificial selection experiments at the microbial community level. Both used “propagule” selection strategies, whereby the best‐performing communities are used as the inocula to form a new generation of communities. Both experiments were contrasted to a random selection control. The...
Spectacular long‐distance migration has evolved repeatedly in animals enabling exploration of resources separated in time and space. In birds, these patterns are largely driven by seasonality, cost of migration, and asymmetries in competition leading most often to leapfrog migration, where northern breeding populations winter furthest to the south. Here, we show that the highly aerial common swift...
Phenotypes respond to environments experienced directly by an individual, via phenotypic plasticity, or to the environment experienced by ancestors, via transgenerational environmental effects. The adaptive value of environmental effects depends not only on the strength and direction of the induced response but also on how long the response persists within and across generations, and how stably it...
Within‐population variation in the traits underpinning reproductive output has long been of central interest to biologists. Since they are strongly linked to lifetime reproductive success, these traits are expected to be subject to strong selection and, if heritable, to evolve. Despite the formation of durable pair bonds in many animal taxa, reproductive traits are often regarded as female‐specific,...
Many closely related populations are distinguished by variation in sexual signals and this variation is hypothesized to play an important role in reproductive isolation and speciation. Within populations, there is considerable evidence that sexual signals provide information about the incidence and severity of parasite infections, but it remains unclear if variation in parasite communities across...
Down feathers are the first feather types that appear in both the phylogenetic and the ontogenetic history of birds. Although it is widely acknowledged that the primary function of downy elements is insulation, little is known about the interspecific variability in the structural morphology of these feathers, and the environmental factors that have influenced their evolution. Here, we collected samples...
Social information use for decision‐making is common and affects ecological and evolutionary processes, including social aggregation, species coexistence, and cultural evolution. Despite increasing ecological knowledge on social information use, very little is known about its genetic basis and therefore its evolutionary potential. Genetic variation in a trait affecting an individual's social and nonsocial...
Conspicuous female coloration can evolve through male mate choice or via female‐female competition thereby increasing female mating success. However, when mating is not beneficial, such as in pre‐reproductive females, selection should favor cryptic rather than conspicuous coloration to avoid male detection and the associated harassment. Nevertheless, conspicuous female coloration occurs in many prereproductive...
Studies of biodiversity through deep time have been a staple for biologists and paleontologists for over 60 years. Investigations of species richness (diversity) revealed that at least five mass extinctions punctuated the last half billion years, each seeing the rapid demise of a large proportion of contemporary taxa. In contrast to diversity, the response of morphological diversity (disparity) to...
The evolution of SARS‐CoV‐2 remains poorly understood. Theory predicts a group‐structured population with selection acting principally at two levels: the pathogen individuals and the group of pathogens within a single host individual. Rapid replication of individual viruses is selected for, but if this replication debilitates the host before transmission occurs, the entire group of viruses in that...
Do local parasite assemblages correlate with the divergence of sexual signals across subspecies? Hund et al. found that locally relevant sexual signals were associated with the most costly local parasites, indicating sexual signals communicate information about local parasite costs and suggesting a potential role in speciation.
Can we simultaneously infer divergence times and shared demographic events? Oaks et al. introduce a full‐likelihood Bayesian method based on genomic data and show that this endeavor remains challenging. Their exercise also reveals some promising avenues for future modeling attempts.
Arabidopsis thaliana accessions have shown genetic diversity and type of stressor to be important determinants of transgenerational stress memory. Alvarez et al. found that certain accessions showed reversible phenotypic plasticity, supporting a model of transgenerational stress memory based upon epigenetic changes. The main proposed epigenetic regulators include DNA methylation, histone modifications,...
Experimental studies demonstrate the existence of phenotypic diversity despite constant genotype and environment. Theoretical models based on a single phenotypic character predict that during an adaptation event, phenotypic noise should be positively selected far from the fitness optimum because it increases the fitness of the genotype, and then be selected against when the population reaches the...
Introgression, gene flow from one population into another, can be asymmetric. Yang et al. suggest that reduction of gene flow in one direction, rather than elevated gene flow in the opposite direction, explains the pattern of asymmetric introgression between two lizard lineages. The authors propose that a dominant male phenotype in one lineage blocks a submissive male phenotype from another lineage...
Empirical studies have documented both positive and negative density‐dependent dispersal, yet most theoretical models predict positive density dependence as a mechanism to avoid competition. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain the occurrence of negative density‐dependent dispersal, but few of these have been formally modeled. Here, we developed an individual‐based model of the evolution...
When differentiated lineages come into contact, their fates depend on demographic and reproductive factors. These factors have been well‐studied in taxa of the same ploidy, but less is known about sympatric lineages that differ in ploidy, particularly with respect to demographic factors. We assessed prezygotic, postzygotic, and total reproductive isolation in naturally pollinated arrays of diploid‐tetraploid...
The mechanisms involved in the production of red carotenoid‐based ornaments of vertebrates are still poorly understood. These colorations often depend on enzymatic transformations (ketolation) of dietary yellow carotenoids, which could occur in the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM). Thus, carotenoid ketolation and cell respiration could share biochemical pathways, favoring the evolution of ketocarotenoid‐based...
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