Abstract

Swim performance is considered a main fitness‐determining trait in many aquatic organisms. Swimming is generally the only way most aquatic prey can escape predation, and swimming capacity is directly linked to food capture, habitat shifts, and reproduction. Therefore, evolutionary studies of swim performance are important to understand adaptation to aquatic environments. Most studies, however, concentrate on the importance of burst‐swim responses to predators, and little is known about its effect on endurance. Even fewer studies associate differences in organism swim capabilities to key gender‐specific responses. In this experiment, we assess the gender‐specific genetic basis of swimming endurance among four different populations of Trinidadian guppies adapted to different predation regimes. Our results show that second‐generation common‐garden females adapted to a low‐predation environment show longer swim endurance than fish adapted to a high‐predation environment. We also find an expected effect of lowered swimming endurance during pregnancy, but interestingly, it did not matter whether the females were in advanced stages of pregnancy, which severely changes body morphology, versus mid‐pregnancy. Males did not show the same trends across populations, and overall had lower swim endurances than female fish combined even when accounting for size differences. Populations recently transplanted from high‐ to low‐predation environments showed similar endurance to natural low‐predation environments in one population but not the other. This study highlights the importance of endurance in the adaptation of aquatic organisms to different predation regimes.

Highlights

  • Locomotive adaptation in response to environmental factors has long been a research interest in many taxa and disciplines (Domenici and Blake 1997; McGuigan et al 2003; Fulton et al 2005; Higham 2007; Marras et al 2011)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • We evaluate the genetic basis of endurance in male and female populations of high- and low-predation-adapted Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata) (Fig. 1)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Locomotive adaptation in response to environmental factors has long been a research interest in many taxa and disciplines (Domenici and Blake 1997; McGuigan et al 2003; Fulton et al 2005; Higham 2007; Marras et al 2011). The interest lies in understanding how heritable variation in traits that affects locomotion responds to natural selection. Because locomotion is a strong determinant of an individual’s interaction with their environment – be it foraging, predator escape, or mate searching – it is important to our understanding of whole-organism adaptation (phenotypic integration sensu, Pigliucci 2003), and the selective trade-offs involved. Studies examining how shifts in selection regime affect the a 2015 The Authors.

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call