Abstract

ABSTRACTAposematic theory has historically predicted that predators should select for warning signals to converge on a single form, as a result of frequency‐dependent learning. However, widespread variation in warning signals is observed across closely related species, populations and, most problematically for evolutionary biologists, among individuals in the same population. Recent research has yielded an increased awareness of this diversity, challenging the paradigm of signal monomorphy in aposematic animals. Here we provide a comprehensive synthesis of these disparate lines of investigation, identifying within them three broad classes of explanation for variation in aposematic warning signals: genetic mechanisms, differences among predators and predator behaviour, and alternative selection pressures upon the signal. The mechanisms producing warning coloration are also important. Detailed studies of the genetic basis of warning signals in some species, most notably Heliconius butterflies, are beginning to shed light on the genetic architecture facilitating or limiting key processes such as the evolution and maintenance of polymorphisms, hybridisation, and speciation. Work on predator behaviour is changing our perception of the predator community as a single homogenous selective agent, emphasising the dynamic nature of predator–prey interactions. Predator variability in a range of factors (e.g. perceptual abilities, tolerance to chemical defences, and individual motivation), suggests that the role of predators is more complicated than previously appreciated. With complex selection regimes at work, polytypisms and polymorphisms may even occur in Müllerian mimicry systems. Meanwhile, phenotypes are often multifunctional, and thus subject to additional biotic and abiotic selection pressures. Some of these selective pressures, primarily sexual selection and thermoregulation, have received considerable attention, while others, such as disease risk and parental effects, offer promising avenues to explore. As well as reviewing the existing evidence from both empirical studies and theoretical modelling, we highlight hypotheses that could benefit from further investigation in aposematic species. Finally by collating known instances of variation in warning signals, we provide a valuable resource for understanding the taxonomic spread of diversity in aposematic signalling and with which to direct future research. A greater appreciation of the extent of variation in aposematic species, and of the selective pressures and constraints which contribute to this once‐paradoxical phenomenon, yields a new perspective for the field of aposematic signalling.

Highlights

  • We show how the complex biotic and abiotic environments in which species live give rise to a myriad of different selection pressures, which in turn lead to diversity in warning signals

  • It is important to note that genetic mechanisms may facilitate or constrain variation (McLean & Stuart-Fox, 2014; see Section III) and that independent fitness peaks can be reinforced by alternative biotic and abiotic selection pressures that may act upon warning coloration (Calsbeek, Hasselquist & Clobert, 2010; see Section V). We outline these and other factors that future models could take into consideration, hopefully facilitating convergence of model predictions with the variation observable in the warning coloration of aposematic species

  • In contrast to the more complex supergene organisation seen in H. numata, mimetic warning coloration in colubrid snakes is the result of a much simpler multilocus system (Davis Rabosky et al, 2016a)

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Summary

THEORY

Explaining the existence of phenotypic variation in the face of selection has long challenged evolutionary biologists and theoreticians (Bull, 1987; Roulin, 2004). This situation should only arise where there is a sufficient amount of overlap in fitness peaks in the adaptive landscape – if there is barely any overlap the selection acting against phenotypes in the overlap area should be similar to that of a novel, unprotected form This scenario is more likely when there is one adaptive peak that is higher than others due to either population size or higher toxin load, in which case it should ‘capture’ the alternative species/morph (Turner, 1983). We outline these and other factors that future models could take into consideration, hopefully facilitating convergence of model predictions with the variation observable in the warning coloration of aposematic species

EVOLUTIONARY AND GENETIC CONSTRAINTS ON WARNING-COLOUR DIVERSITY
PREDATION AND SIGNAL VARIATION
Motivation
THE MULTIFUNCTIONALITY OF APOSEMATIC SIGNALS
TAXONOMIC OCCURRENCE OF WARNING-SIGNAL POLYMORPHISM
CONCLUSIONS
VIII. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Findings
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
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