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Underappreciated Consequences of Phenotypic Plasticity for Ecological Speciation

TLDR
Plasticity is an important consideration for studies of speciation in nature, and this topic promises fertile ground for integrating developmental biology with ecology and evolution.
Abstract
Phenotypic plasticity was once seen primarily as a constraint on adaptive evolution or merely a nuisance by geneticists. However, some biologists promote plasticity as a source of novelty and a factor in evolution on par with mutation, drift, gene flow, and selection. These claims are controversial and largely untested, but progress has been made on more modest questions about effects of plasticity on local adaptation (the first component of ecological speciation). Adaptive phenotypic plasticity can be a buffer against divergent selection. It can also facilitate colonization of new niches and rapid divergent evolution. The influence of non-adaptive plasticity has been underappreciated. Non-adaptive plasticity, too can interact with selection to promote or inhibit genetic differentiation. Finally, phenotypic plasticity of reproductive characters might directly influence evolution of reproductive isolation (the second component of ecological speciation). Plasticity can cause assortative mating, but its influence on gene flow ultimately depends on maintenance of environmental similarity between parents and offspring. Examples of plasticity influencing mating and habitat choice suggest that this, too, might be an underappreciated factor in speciation. Plasticity is an important consideration for studies of speciation in nature, and this topic promises fertile ground for integrating developmental biology with ecology and evolution.

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Journal ArticleDOI

ECOLOGY/EVOLUTION: Phenotypic Plasticity

A. M. Sugden
- 08 Oct 2004 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

What is environmental stress? Insights from fish living in a variable environment.

TL;DR: It is suggested that viewing stressors as environmental changes that cause reductions in performance or fitness provides the broadest and most useful conception of the phenomenon of stress.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phenotypic plasticity and epigenetic marking: an assessment of evidence for genetic accommodation

TL;DR: An overview of models and mechanisms for how evolutionary influences may be manifested both for plasticity and epigenetic marking are provided, and a review of a wide variety of studies finds widespread evidence for evolution by genetic accommodation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of phenotypic plasticity in colonizing species.

TL;DR: An hypothesis is elaborate to explain inconsistent empirical findings comparing phenotypic plasticity in colonizing populations or species with plasticity from their native or ancestral range.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution in Mendelian Populations.

TL;DR: Page 108, last line of text, for "P/P″" read "P′/ P″."
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution in Mendelian populations

TL;DR: The frequency of a given gene in a population may be modified by a number of conditions including recurrent mutation to and from it, migration, selection of various sorts and, far from least in importance, were chance variation.
Book

Principles of population genetics

TL;DR: Genetic and Phenotypic Variation Organisation of Genetic Variation Random Genetic Drift Mutation and the Neutral Theory Darwinian Selection Inbreeding, Population Subdivision, and Migration Molecular Population Genetics Evolutionary Quantitative Genetics Population Genomics Human Population Genetics
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