Spatial heterogeneity lowers rather than increases host-parasite specialization.
J Evol Biol
; 28(9): 1682-90, 2015 09.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-26135011
Abiotic environmental heterogeneity can promote the evolution of diverse resource specialists, which in turn may increase the degree of host-parasite specialization. We coevolved Pseudomonas fluorescens and lytic phage Ï2 in spatially structured populations, each consisting of two interconnected subpopulations evolving in the same or different nutrient media (homogeneous and heterogeneous environments, respectively). Counter to the normal expectation, host-parasite specialization was significantly lower in heterogeneous compared with homogeneous environments. This result could not be explained by dispersal homogenizing populations, as this would have resulted in the heterogeneous treatments having levels of specialization equal to or greater than that of the homogeneous environments. We argue that selection for costly generalists is greatest when the coevolving species are exposed to diverse environmental conditions and that this can provide an explanation for our results. A simple coevolutionary model of this process suggests that this can be a general mechanism by which environmental heterogeneity can reduce rather than increase host-parasite specialization.
Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Pseudomonas fluorescens
/
Pseudomonas Phages
/
Host-Parasite Interactions
/
Models, Theoretical
Language:
En
Journal:
J Evol Biol
Journal subject:
BIOLOGIA
Year:
2015
Document type:
Article
Country of publication:
Switzerland