Abstract

Interspecific competition for shared resources should select for evolutionary divergence in resource use between competing species, termed character displacement. Many purported examples of character displacement exist, but few completely rule out alternative explanations. We reared genetically diverse populations of two species of bean beetles, Callosobruchus maculatus and Callosobruchus chinensis, in allopatry and sympatry on a mixture of adzuki beans and lentils, and assayed oviposition preference and other phenotypic traits after four, eight, and twelve generations of (co)evolution. C. maculatus specializes on adzuki beans; the generalist C. chinensis uses both beans. C. chinensis growing in allopatry emerged equally from both bean species. In sympatry, the two species competing strongly and coexisted via strong realized resource partitioning, with C. chinensis emerging almost exclusively from lentils and C. maculatus emerging almost exclusively from adzuki beans. However, oviposition preferences, larval survival traits, and larval development rates in both beetle species did not vary consistently between allopatric versus sympatric treatments. Rather, traits evolved in treatment‐independent fashion, with several traits exhibiting reversals in their evolutionary trajectories. For example, C. chinensis initially evolved a slower egg‐to‐adult development rate on adzuki beans in both allopatry and sympatry, then subsequently evolved back toward the faster ancestral development rate. Lack of character displacement is consistent with a previous similar experiment in bean beetles and may reflect lack of evolutionary trade‐offs in resource use. However, evolutionary reversals were unexpected and remain unexplained. Together with other empirical and theoretical work, our results illustrate the stringency of the conditions for character displacement.

Highlights

  • Interspecific resource competition can select for competing species to evolve to use alternative resources for which there is currently less competition

  • Our beetles had access to two food resources: adzuki beans (Vigna angularis), in which larvae of both species can consume and for which the specialist C. maculatus is the superior competitor under standard culture conditions (Hausch, 2015; Utida, 1953); lentils (Lens culinaris) are an alternative food resource used by C. chinensis, on which C. maculatus larvae experience high mortality and extremely slow development

  • In the context of this experiment, the two species exhibit a specialistgeneralist trade-off (Taper, 1990), which in sympatry could select for the generalist C. chinensis to specialize on lentils and for the specialist C. maculatus to increasingly specialize on adzuki beans

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Interspecific resource competition can select for competing species to evolve to use alternative resources for which there is currently less competition. The large gap between the numbers of purported and well-established examples of character displacement likely is due in part to the difficulty in ruling out alternative explanations (Schluter & McPhail, 1992; Stuart & Losos, 2013) Another possibility is that character displacement may be a relatively uncommon outcome of interspecific competition. Taper (1990) did not detect an evolutionary trade-off in resource use; C. chinensis adapted physiologically to lentils, but without any cost to its physiological adaptation to mung beans. We tested whether sympatric and allopatric populations diverged in their behavioral preference for lentils versus adzuki beans, and in their physiological adaptations to each resource. We compared the evolutionary trajectories of the two species when growing in sympatry to distinguish divergent, convergent, or parallel character displacement

| METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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