A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Phylogeny-Based Comparative Methods Question the Adaptive Nature of Sporophytic Specializations in Mosses




AuthorsHuttunen S, Olsson S, Buchbender V, Enroth J, Hedenas L, Quandt D

PublisherPUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE

Publication year2012

JournalPLoS ONE

Journal name in sourcePLOS ONE

Journal acronymPLOS ONE

Article numberARTN e48268

Number in series10

Volume7

Issue10

Number of pages10

ISSN1932-6203

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048268


Abstract
Adaptive evolution has often been proposed to explain correlations between habitats and certain phenotypes. In mosses, a high frequency of species with specialized sporophytic traits in exposed or epiphytic habitats was, already 100 years ago, suggested as due to adaptation. We tested this hypothesis by contrasting phylogenetic and morphological data from two moss families, Neckeraceae and Lembophyllaceae, both of which show parallel shifts to a specialized morphology and to exposed epiphytic or epilithic habitats. Phylogeny-based tests for correlated evolution revealed that evolution of four sporophytic traits is correlated with a habitat shift. For three of them, evolutionary rates of dual character-state changes suggest that habitat shifts appear prior to changes in morphology. This suggests that they could have evolved as adaptations to new habitats. Regarding the fourth correlated trait the specialized morphology had already evolved before the habitat shift. In addition, several other specialized "epiphytic" traits show no correlation with a habitat shift. Besides adaptive diversification, other processes thus also affect the match between phenotype and environment. Several potential factors such as complex genetic and developmental pathways yielding the same phenotypes, differences in strength of selection, or constraints in phenotypic evolution may lead to an inability of phylogeny-based comparative methods to detect potential adaptations.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 20:29