The nature of adaptations

Adaptive trait

•A trait that enhances fitness compared with an alternative trait

•Including historical perspective

–Character state may be a consequence of evolutionary history and not an adaptation

Preadaptation

Exaptation

Not all traits are adaptations

•Necessary consequence of chemistry or physics

•Evolution by genetic drift

•Hitchhiking and pleiotropy

•Phylogenetic history

How do you recognize adaptations?

•Complexity

•Design

•Prediction and observation

•Experiments

•Comparative methods

Complexity

•Complex traits probably have an adaptive function

Design

•Function is inferred by design or matches predictions

–Functional morphology

–Ecophysiology

Prediction and observation

•Identify or postulate genetic variants of trait

•Develop hypothesis of function of trait; develop alternative hypotheses and predictions

•Test predictions

Observation

•Example: Cepaea (land snails) color pattern

Observation

•Hypothesis: Banding patterns important for camouflage

•Prediction: Habitat segregation

–Banded snails in complex background

–Unbanded snails in uniform background

Observation

•Test

Observation

•Hypothesis: Banding pattern important for camouflage

•Prediction: Higher mortality for banded snails than unbanded snails in woods due to predation

Observation

•Test: predation rates by song thrush

•Frequency of banded in one site: 47.1%

•Frequency of banded snails eaten by thrushes: 56.3%.

Experiment

•Manipulate trait to test hypothesis

•Could paint bands on snail shells and examine whether predation rate increases

•More powerful than observation (why?)

Experiment

•Example: touch-me-not petals

Experiment

•Hypothesis: Petals important in attracting pollinators

•Prediction: Flowers with smaller petals will have fewer bee visits than those with big petals

Experiment

•Test: Compare normal flowers with surgically altered flowers

Experimental control

•An important control: ‘whole’ flowers were lightly trimmed around edges

•Tests for unexpected effects of treatment

•Another example: Should apply paint to all snail shells, in case paint itself affects predation

Experiment

•Example: tephritid flies and jumping spiders

Why to flies wave wings?

•Scare away other predators

•Scare away jumping spiders

What makes a good experiment?

•Consideration of alternative hypotheses

•Clear predictions that distinguish among hypotheses

•Good controls, randomization, replication

Why don’t we always do experiments?

Comparative method

•Compare trait among related species

•A good method when interesting variation is among, rather than within, species

Comparative method

•Example: Testis size, body mass, and mating system in primates

Comparative method

•Example: Testis size and social group size in bats

Comparative method

•Important issue: must consider relationships among species. Are points on graph independent?

Phylogenetically independent contrasts

Phylogenetically independent contrasts

Comparative method: our example revisited

Constraints to adaptation

–Genetic

–Physiological and developmental

–Phyletic

Constraints to adaptation

•Genetic

–Lack of genetic variation

–Genetic correlations among traits

Example: genetic correlations

•Sizes of different flower parts are correlated in radish

•Very strong selection required to ‘break’ correlations and change shape of flowers

Physiological constraint

•Fuchsia flowers retained after pollination because growth of pollen tubes

takes time

Developmental constraint

•Larval insects never have compound eyes of adults

Developmental constraint

•Limitations to animal body plans

Constraints to adaptation

•Phyletic

–Everything evolves from something else

–Basic idea: you’re stuck with your history

Example of phyletic constraint

•The panda’s thumb

Example of phyletic constraint

Constraints: summary

•Slow or prevent adaptation

•Relative importance varies among populations or species