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MATINGS SYSTEMS AND THE EVOLUTION OF NICHE BREADTH
Proulx, S.R., 1999. The American Naturalist, 154:89-98.
Abstract
Several theoretical studies of niche breadth evolution have shown that
niche breadth expansion can only occur under a limited set
of conditions. These studies have assumed
that mating pairs form at random within spatial sub-populations.
I show here that non-random mating within spatial sub-populations
can greatly alter niche breadth evolution.
Niche breadth expansion is restricted by assortative mating, but is permitted
by sexual selection.
When new populations are formed by a single
pulse of immigrants, the ability to persist in novel but similar environments
is enhanced by sexual selection. When new populations receive a
constant stream of immigrants, sexual selection allows the
evolution of increased niche breadth even when the novel environment is
very different from the ancestral environment. These results suggest
that species lineages that exhibit sexual selection will have broader
niches than species lineages that mate randomly or assortatively.
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© Copyright 1999 The
University of Chicago
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