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Dryad

Data from: Plasticity and evolution in correlated suites of traits

Cite this dataset

Fischer, Eva K.; Ghalambor, Cameron K.; Hoke, Kim L. (2016). Data from: Plasticity and evolution in correlated suites of traits [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.t08sg

Abstract

When organisms are faced with new or changing environments, a central challenge is the coordination of adaptive shifts in many different phenotypic traits. The actual relationships among traits may facilitate or constrain evolutionary responses to selection, depending on whether the direction of selection is aligned or opposed to the pattern of trait correlations. Attempts to predict evolutionary potential in correlated traits generally assume that correlations are stable across time and space; however, increasing evidence suggests that this may not be the case, and flexibility in trait correlations could bias evolutionary trajectories. We examined genetic and environmental influences on variation and covariation in a suite of behavioral traits to understand if and how flexibility in trait correlations influences adaptation to novel environments. We tested the role of genetic and environmental influences on behavioral trait correlations by comparing Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata) historically adapted to high- and low-predation environments that were reared under native and non-native environmental conditions. Both high- and low-predation fish exhibited increased behavioral variance when reared under non-native versus native environmental conditions, and rearing in the non-native environment shifted the major axis of variation among behaviors. Our findings emphasize that trait correlations observed in one population or environment may not predict correlations in another and that environmentally induced plasticity in correlations may bias behavioral divergence in novel environments.

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