Niche evolution and thermal adaptation in the temperate species Drosophila americana

2014 | journal article

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​Niche evolution and thermal adaptation in the temperate species Drosophila americana​
Sillero, N.; Reis, M. ; Vieira, C. P.; Vieira, J. & Morales-Hojas, R.​ (2014) 
Journal of Evolutionary Biology27(8) pp. 1549​-1561​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/jeb.12400 

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Authors
Sillero, N.; Reis, Micael ; Vieira, C. P.; Vieira, J.; Morales-Hojas, R.
Abstract
The study of ecological niche evolution is fundamental for understanding how the environment influences species' geographical distributions and their adaptation to divergent environments. Here, we present a study of the ecological niche, demographic history and thermal performance (locomotor activity, developmental time and fertility/viability) of the temperate species Drosophila americana and its two chromosomal forms. Temperature is the environmental factor that contributes most to the species' and chromosomal forms' ecological niches, although precipitation is also important in the model of the southern populations. The past distribution model of the species predicts a drastic reduction in the suitable area for the distribution of the species during the last glacial maximum (LGM), suggesting a strong bottleneck. However, DNA analyses did not detect a bottleneck signature during the LGM. These contrasting results could indicate that D. americana niche preference evolves with environmental change, and thus, there is no evidence to support niche conservatism in this species. Thermal performance experiments show no difference in the locomotor activity across a temperature range of 15 to 38 °C between flies from the north and the south of its distribution. However, we found significant differences in developmental time and fertility/viability between the two chromosomal forms at the model's optimal temperatures for the two forms. However, results do not indicate that they perform better for the traits studied here in their respective optimal niche temperatures. This suggests that behaviour plays an important role in thermoregulation, supporting the capacity of this species to adapt to different climatic conditions across its latitudinal distribution.
Issue Date
2014
Journal
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 
ISSN
1010-061X
eISSN
1420-9101
Language
English

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