Imbalance of Predator and Prey Armament: Geographic Clines in Phenotypic Interface and Natural Selection
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 2005 papers
Abstract
The escalation of defensive/offensive arms is ubiquitous in prey-predator evolutionary interactions. However, there may be a geographically varying imbalance in the armaments of participating species that affects the outcome of local interactions. In a system involving the Japanese camellia (Camellia japonica) and its obligate seed predator, the camellia weevil (Curculio camelliae), we investigated the geographic variation in physical defensive/offensive traits and that in natural selection on the plant's defense among 17 populations over a 700-km-wide area in Japan. The sizes of the plant defensive apparatus (pericarp thickness) and the weevil offensive apparatus (rostrum length) clearly correlated with each other across populations. Nevertheless, the balance in armaments between the two species was geographically structured. In the populations for which the balance was relatively advantageous for the plant's defense, natural selection on the trait was stronger because in the other populations, most plant individuals were too vulnerable to resist the attacks of the weevil, and their seeds were infested independent of pericarp thickness. We also found that the imbalance between the defensive/offensive armaments and the intensity of natural selection showed clear latitudinal clines. Overall, our results suggest that the imbalance of armament between sympatric prey and predator could determine the strength of local selection and that climatic conditions could affect the local and overall trajectory of coevolutionary arms races.
Related Papers
- → Sympatric speciation in animals: new wine in old bottles(1994)504 cited
- → Multiple origins of obligate nematode and insect symbionts by a clade of bacteria closely related to plant pathogens(2020)52 cited
- → Obligate mutualistic heritable symbiosis in sap-feeding insects: an intricate relationship in nature(2024)9 cited
- Hot-water treatment for the control of the banana weevil, Cosmopolites sordidus Germar (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), in Uganda.(1998)
- → Mechanisms for Species Discrimination in Sympatric and Non-Sympatric Chickadees(2006)