Abstract

Although intraspecific variability is now widely recognized as affecting evolutionary and ecological processes, our knowledge on the importance of intraspecific variability within invasive species is still limited. This is despite the fact that understanding the linkage between within‐population morphological divergences and the use of different trophic or spatial resources (i.e., resource polymorphism) can help to better predict their ecological impacts on recipient ecosystems. Here, we quantified the extent of resource polymorphism within populations of a worldwide invasive crayfish species, Procambarus clarkii, in 16 lake populations by comparing their trophic (estimated using stable isotope analyses) and morphological characteristics between individuals from the littoral and pelagic habitats. Our results first demonstrated that crayfish occured in both littoral and pelagic habitats of seven lakes and that the use of pelagic habitat was associated with increased abundance of littoral crayfish. We then found morphological (i.e., body and chelae shapes) and trophic divergence (i.e., reliance on littoral carbon) among individuals from littoral and pelagic habitats, highlighting the existence of resource polymorphism in invasive populations. There was no genetic differentiation between individuals from the two habitats, implying that this resource polymorphism was stable (i.e., high gene flow between individuals). Finally, we demonstrated that a divergent adaptive process was responsible for the morphological divergence in body and chela shapes between habitats while difference in littoral reliance neutrally evolved under genetic drift. These findings demonstrated that invasive P. clarkii can display strong within‐population phenotypic variability in recent populations, and this could lead to contrasting ecological impacts between littoral and pelagic individuals.

Highlights

  • Intraspecific variability is widely recognized as playing a crucial role in evolutionary and ecological processes (Read, Hoban, Eppinga, Schweitzer, & Bailey, 2016; Violle et al, 2012)

  • There was no significant difference between PST for trophic position and littoral reliance and the global FST value, indicating that both trophic traits evolved under nonadaptive processes

  • We observed that morphological divergences between littoral and pelagic habitats were associated with changes in the origin of the resource used by crayfish

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Intraspecific variability is widely recognized as playing a crucial role in evolutionary and ecological processes (Read, Hoban, Eppinga, Schweitzer, & Bailey, 2016; Violle et al, 2012). Resource polymorphism refers to within-population morphological divergences due to differences in habitat and trophic resource use (Smith & Skúlason, 1996). It involves the use of an underexploited ecological niche by some individuals of the population, associated with changes in functional traits due to new environmental conditions (Komiya, Fujita, & Watanabe, 2011; Sol et al, 2005). We predicted that gene flow would be high (i.e., associated with stable polymorphism, Smith & Skúlason, 1996) in these recently colonized ecosystems and that phenotypic variability would be mainly caused by an adaptive response to environmental conditions

| MATERIAL AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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