Abstract

Current theoretical studies on mechanisms promoting species co-existence in diverse communities assume that species are fixed in their mating behavior. Each species is a discrete evolutionary unit, even though most empirical evidence indicates that inter-specific gene flow occurs in plant and animal groups. Here, in a data-driven meta-community model of species co-existence, we allow mating behavior to respond to local species composition and abundance. While individuals primarily out-cross, species maintain a diminished capacity for selfing and hybridization. Mate choice is treated as a variable behavior, which responds to intrinsic traits determining mate choice and the density and availability of sympatric inter-fertile individuals. When mate choice is strongly limited, even low survivorship of selfed offspring can prevent extinction of rare species. With increasing mate choice, low hybridization success rates maintain community level diversity for extended periods of time. In high diversity tropical tree communities, competition among sympatric congeneric species is negligible, because direct spatial proximity with close relatives is infrequent. Therefore, the genomic donorship presents little cost. By incorporating variable mating behavior into evolutionary models of diversification, we also discuss how participation in a syngameon may be selectively advantageous. We view this behavior as a genomic mutualism, where maintenance of genomic structure and diminished inter-fertility, allows each species in the syngameon to benefit from a greater effective population size during episodes of selective disadvantage. Rare species would play a particularly important role in these syngameons as they are more likely to produce heterospecific crosses and transgressive phenotypes. We propose that inter-specific gene flow can play a critical role by allowing genomic mutualists to avoid extinction and gain local adaptations.

Highlights

  • Numerous ecological mechanisms, both stochastic and deterministic, affect species co-existence in communities with high levels of diversity (Connell, 1961; Janzen, 1970; Hubbell, 1997; Webb and Peart, 1999; Wright, 2002; Volkov et al, 2005)

  • In this study, using a numerical simulation model, we attempt to incorporate an ecologically responsive mating behavior by allowing both inter-specific crosses and self-fertilization to play a role in neutral meta-community ecological dynamics

  • Community Composition of Closely-related Species To estimate the potential impact of inter-specific hybridization at the community level, we calculated the number of tree species that live sympatrically in the Pasoh Long-Term Dynamics Plot with congeneric species, assuming that congeneric species are at least partially inter-fertile and represent “genomic mutualists.”

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Summary

Introduction

Both stochastic and deterministic, affect species co-existence in communities with high levels of diversity (Connell, 1961; Janzen, 1970; Hubbell, 1997; Webb and Peart, 1999; Wright, 2002; Volkov et al, 2005). In this study, using a numerical simulation model, we attempt to incorporate an ecologically responsive mating behavior by allowing both inter-specific crosses and self-fertilization to play a role in neutral meta-community ecological dynamics. We model individual plant reproductive behaviors, namely selfing, conspecific out-crossing, and inter-specific gene flow, in a metacommunity of varying species diversity We allow these behaviors to respond to an environmental signal, which is the composition and abundance of pollen reaching their stigma. We believe that modeling reproductive effort as a variable behavior, controlled by the density-dependent local community composition of inter-fertile species and the probability of successful outcomes from various types of crosses, can provide further insight into species extinction in highly diverse communities, generate numerous testable hypotheses about the evolution of rare species, and has major implications for species management

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