2015
DOI: 10.1086/683231
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Mechanisms by Which Phenotypic Plasticity Affects Adaptive Divergence and Ecological Speciation

Abstract: Phenotypic plasticity is the ability of one genotype to produce different phenotypes depending on environmental conditions. Several conceptual models emphasize the role of plasticity in promoting reproductive isolation and, ultimately, speciation in populations that forage on two or more resources. These models predict that plasticity plays a critical role in the early stages of speciation, prior to genetic divergence, by facilitating fast phenotypic divergence. The ability to plastically express alternative p… Show more

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Cited by 55 publications
(60 citation statements)
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“…Variation in ecological conditions between populations could lead to genetic differentiation affecting the social system and thus IVSO between populations. This could be the starting point of speciation (Meynard, Pillay, Perrigault, Caminade, & Ganem, ; Nonaka, Svanbäck, Thibert‐Plante, Englund, & Brännström, ; Rymer, Pillay, & Schradin, ).…”
Section: Why Did Ivso Evolve?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Variation in ecological conditions between populations could lead to genetic differentiation affecting the social system and thus IVSO between populations. This could be the starting point of speciation (Meynard, Pillay, Perrigault, Caminade, & Ganem, ; Nonaka, Svanbäck, Thibert‐Plante, Englund, & Brännström, ; Rymer, Pillay, & Schradin, ).…”
Section: Why Did Ivso Evolve?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…; Thibert‐Plante and Gavrilets ; Nonaka et al. ). Indeed, models on the role of plasticity in promoting ecological divergence suggest that the evolution of a reproductive barrier can be strongly facilitated by phenotypic plasticity if dispersal events take place after the development of the plastic phenotype (Thibert‐Plante and Gavrilets ) and an individual's settlement in a particular habitat depends on its phenotype (i.e., adaptive habitat choice; Nonaka et al.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The evolutionary consequences of phenotype‐mediated assortative mating may be the same as in habitat‐assortative mating if the expressed phenotype is linked to the habitat (West‐Eberhard 2003; Nonaka et al. ). Thus, assortative mating due to host plant dependent insect phenotypes can be considered as an extension of host‐associated mating in phytophagous insects (Diehl and Bush ), as matings are indirectly host‐mediated, but not spatially restricted to the host species.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2010; Thibert‐Plante and Hendry ; Wund 2012; Thibert‐Plante and Gavrilets ; Nonaka et al. ). Our results bridge between community ecology and evolutionary biology by illustrating the potential role of phenotypic plasticity for phytophagous insect communities and ecological speciation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%