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The Geographic Mosaic Theory of Coevolution

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Title: The Geographic Mosaic Theory of Coevolution


1
The Geographic Mosaic Theory of Coevolution
  • Advanced by John N.Thompson in his 1994 book
    entitled
  • The Coevolutionary Process

2
Geographic Mosaic Theory
  • States that most interactions exhibit an
    evolutionary dynamic geographic mosaic
  • Formed by the interpopulational differences in
    outcome, adaptation and specialization

3
Geographic Mosaic Theory
  • For example, natural selection on the
    relationship between a pair or group of species
    may favor directional selection in one population
    and polymorphism in another
  • It may favor escalation of antagonism in some
    environments and reduced antagonism or mutualism
    in others

4
Geographic Mosaic Theory
  • Parasitism, grazing, predation, competition,
    symbiotic mutalisms, and nonsymbiotic mutalisms
    all show dynamic patterns of specialization that
    are molded in different ways both locally and
    geographically by natural selection through the
    community context in which the interactions occur

5
Geographic Mosaic Theory
  • The geographic mosaic approach bridges studies of
    local populations and of whole species, it also
    incorporates many aspects of the ecology and
    genetics of species that weve discovered in
    recent decades

6
An Example
  • Herre, E.A. 1993. Population structure and the
    evolution of virulence in nematode parasites of
    fig wasps. Science 2591442-1445.

7
1st Some Theoretical Predictions
  • This first example deals with the conditions that
    favor the evolution of reduced antagonism
  • One of the conditions favoring reduced antagonism
    in long-term interactions is high partner
    fidelity and low availability of alternative
    partners
  • For internal parasites the availability of
    alternative partners depends upon both the modes
    and the rates of transmission between hosts

8
Theoretical Predictions
  • Low transmission rates and strictly vertical
    transmission (parent to offspring) generally
    appear to favor parasite genotypes that are less
    detrimental in their effects on host survival
  • High transmission rates and horizontal
    transmission (between unrelated individuals in a
    population) favor parasite genotypes that
    maximize their growth rate in the host and
    thereby remain highly antagonistic to their host

9
Herres (1993) work on fig wasps and their
nematode parasites provide strong support for
this view as well as support for the Geographic
Mosaic Theory
10
Fig Wasps
  • The opportunity for horizontal transmission of
    the nematode parasite is dependent upon the
    number of fig wasp females that normally enter a
    fig inflorescence
  • Each fig species is pollinated by its own species
    of fig wasp
  • Depending upon the fig species and the
    population, one or more gravid female fig wasps
    enter each enclosed inflorescence

11
Fig Wasps
  • The females pollinate and lay eggs within the
    flowers and then die within the fig
  • The offspring develop within the seeds, eclose as
    adults, mate, and then the females fly off to lay
    their eggs in another fig inflorescence

12
Nematodes
  • In the vicinity of the Panama Canal, each of
    eleven species of fig wasp is parasitized by a
    distinct species of nematode
  • The nematodes lay their eggs within the figs and
    the eggs hatch synchronously with the emergence
    of adult female fig wasps
  • The young nematodes crawl onto a fig wasp, enter
    the body cavity, and are transported with the
    female as she flies off in search of a fig where
    she lays her eggs

13
Nematodes
  • As the nematodes grow, they eventually consume
    the adult female, emerge from her body, and renew
    the cycle by laying their eggs in the fig

14
Transmission
  • If only one fig wasp lays her eggs within a fig,
    the nematodes must rely solely on the offspring
    of that female as hosts for the next generation.
    That is, transmission of the nematodes is
    strictly vertical, from a fig wasp female to her
    offspring
  • If, however, several fig wasps oviposit into the
    same fig, the nematodes have the opportunity to
    attack the offspring of several females
    (horizontal transmission can take place).

15
Herres (1993) Findings
  • That vertical transmission has favored nematodes
    that have no effect on the number of offspring
    produced by their host
  • By comparison, horizontal transmission has
    favored nematodes that are more destructive to
    their hosts

16
Among the 11 species he studied, there was a near
linear relationship between virulence and the
proportion of figs colonized by fig wasp females
17
These results suggest that the direction of
evolution depends partially upon the structure of
populations, which will affect factors such as
partner fidelity and transmission
18
How Gene Flow Affects Geographic Mosaics
  • S.E. Forde, J.N. Thompson and B.J.M. Bohannan.
    2004. Adaptation varies through space and time in
    a coevolving host-parasitoid interaction. Nature
    431841-844.

19
Gene Flow Geographic Mosaic
  • Show that gene flow across a spatially structured
    landscape alters coevolution of parasitoids and
    their hosts and that the resulting patterns can
    fluctuate in both space and time
  • Study used E. coli and a T7 bacteriophage

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23
Gene Flow Geographic Mosaic
  • Results provide evidence that gene flow can alter
    the dynamics of coevolution
  • and
  • That fragmentation of the natural landscape can
    alter the evolutionary processes that enable
    organisms to adapt to changing local conditions
    slowing coevolutionary changes
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