Abstract

AbstractIn animal-pollinated plants, the growth environment and pollination environment are two important agents of natural selection. However, their simultaneous effects on plant speciation remain underexplored. Here, we report a theoretical finding that if plants' local adaptation to the growth environment increases their floral rewards for pollinators, it can strongly facilitate ecological speciation in plants. We consider two evolving plant traits, vegetative and floral signal traits, in a population genetic model for two plant populations under divergent selection from different growth environments. The vegetative trait determines plants' local adaptation. Locally adapted plants reward pollinators better than maladapted plants. By associative learning, pollinators acquire learned preferences for floral signal traits expressed by better-rewarding plants. If pollinators' learned preferences become divergent between populations, floral signal divergence occurs and plants develop genetic associations between vegetative and floral signal traits, leading to ecological speciation via a two-allele mechanism. Interestingly, speciation is contingent on whether novel floral signal variants arise before or after plant populations become locally adapted to the growth environment. Our results suggest that simultaneous selection from growth and pollination environments might be important for the ecological speciation of animal-pollinated plants.

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