Abstract

Conspecifics inhabiting divergent environments frequently differ in morphology, physiology, and performance, but the interrelationships amongst traits and with Darwinian fitness remains poorly understood. We investigated population differentiation in morphology, metabolic rate, and swimming performance in three‐spined sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus L.), contrasting a marine/ancestral population with two distinct freshwater morphotypes derived from it: the “typical” low‐plated morph, and a unique “small‐plated” morph. We test the hypothesis that similar to plate loss in other freshwater populations, reduction in lateral plate size also evolved in response to selection. Additionally, we test how morphology, physiology, and performance have evolved in concert as a response to differences in selection between marine and freshwater environments. We raised pure‐bred second‐generation fish originating from three populations and quantified their lateral plate coverage, burst‐ and critical swimming speeds, as well as standard and active metabolic rates. Using a multivariate Q ST‐F ST framework, we detected signals of directional selection on metabolic physiology and lateral plate coverage, notably demonstrating that selection is responsible for the reduction in lateral plate coverage in a small‐plated stickleback population. We also uncovered signals of multivariate selection amongst all bivariate trait combinations except the two metrics of swimming performance. Divergence between the freshwater and marine populations exceeded neutral expectation in morphology and in most physiological and performance traits, indicating that adaptation to freshwater habitats has occurred, but through different combinations of traits in different populations. These results highlight both the complex interplay between morphology, physiology and performance in local adaptation, and a framework for their investigation.

Highlights

  • Adaptation to novel environments can involve changes at multiple phenotypic levels

  • This study provides the first evidence of directional selection on active and standard metabolic rate in marine and freshwater stickleback populations

  • We show that selection is responsible for the reduction in lateral plate coverage in a small-­plated stickleback population in Lapland

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Summary

Introduction

Adaptation to novel environments can involve changes at multiple phenotypic levels. Perhaps due to the relative ease at which they are observed and measured, changes in morphological traits have featured prominently in studies of adaptation to novel habitats (Gavrilets & Losos, 2009; Reznick & Ghalambor, 2001; Rundell & Price, 2009). Results from genome scans increasingly reveal signals of selection acting on physiological processes (Akey et al, 2010; Gautier et al, 2009; Shimada, Shikano, & Merilä, 2011; Simonson et al, 2010), and on metabolism in particular (reviewed in Marden, 2013) While these types of studies can provide initial evidence in support of adaptive divergence, the case of the Andean Sparrow (Zonotrichia capensis) highlights their potential limitations: A genome scan suggested selection acting on metabolic pathways, but this result was contradicted by experimental tests of associated enzyme affinity (Cheviron et al, 2014). An integrated study of whether and how selection has shaped differentiation of morphological, physiological, and performance traits amongst conspecifics adapted to divergent environments provides one way of tackling this lacuna (Irschick & Garland, 2001)

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