eeb 321 community ecology: phylogenetics lecture

31
EEB321: Community Phylogenetic The study of how evolutionary relationships among species affect the structure of communities

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Page 1: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

EEB321: Community Phylogenetics

The study of how evolutionary relationships among species affect the structure of communities

Page 2: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Lecture outline

The effect of evolutionary relatedness on the structure of communities

1. Classic theory – limiting similarity and why relatedness might matter

2. Contemporary community phylogenetics – inferring pattern from process

3. The future of phylogeny-coexistence relationships: stabilizing differences, fitness differences, and beyond

Page 3: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture
Page 4: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

The community assembly process

Regional species pool

Habitat filter

Biotic filter

Local community

Page 5: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Size of available seeds (cm)

Freq

uenc

y

2.0 2.51.0 1.5 3.0

Community assembly and limiting similarity

Page 6: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Size of available seeds (cm)

Freq

uenc

y

2.0 2.51.0 1.5 3.0

Community assembly and limiting similarity

Page 7: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Many cases of and , but no

Community assembly and limiting similarity

Page 8: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

But, how do we measure similarity?

Assumptions:• we know which traits

are important

• the important traits can be measured

• trait combinations are either known or not important

Hutchinson: the niche is an n-dimensional hypervolume

Page 10: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Early evidence: species to genus ratios

Elton 1946: Fewer species per genus are present locally than are regionally available

Elton et al. 1946 J of Animal EcologySimberloff 1970 Evolution

Genus 1 Genus 2 Genus 3

Page 11: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

But, taxonomic groupings provide coarse estimates of evolutionary time

More time = more opportunity for ecological specialization

Fact: we now know that many initial classifications were actually wrong

1 mya 30 mya

Page 12: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

• 1970s: molecular + statistical techniques improved our ability to estimate evolutionary time– expensive and time consuming

• 1990s: new computational tools to expedite the process

• Now: $5 per sequence, compared to $1000s

New phylogenetic tools

Page 13: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture
Page 14: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Environmental filteringCompetitive interactions

Over-dispersion Under-dispersion

Webb et al. 2002 Annu Rev Ecol Syst

Page 15: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Phylogenetic distance to estimate community relatedness

Because branch lengths are proportional to evolutionary time, we can sum them for the community

2 2

Phylogenetic distance = 4 units

Page 16: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Phylogenetic distance to estimate community relatedness

Because branch lengths are proportional to evolutionary time, we can sum them for the community

6 6

Phylogenetic distance = 12 units

Page 17: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Phylogenetic distance to estimate community relatedness

Because branch lengths are proportional to evolutionary time, we can sum them for the community

46

Phylogenetic distance = 14 units = 4.6 units per species

2 2

Page 18: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Testing phylogenetic patterns

• we need to formally test if communities are phylogenetically over- or under-dispersed

• we can use a NULL model approach, where we compare our observed data to an expected pattern if assembly was RANDOM– observed PD > expected = overdispersed– observed PD < expected = underdispersed

Page 19: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Null models in phylogenetic community analyses

RANDOM

Freq

uenc

yobserved value

Distribution of expectedvalues under a random pattern

The observed value is not significantly different from the null expectation

Page 20: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Environmental filteringCompetitive interactions

Over-dispersion Under-dispersion

Webb et al. 2002 Annu Rev Ecol Syst

Page 21: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Null models in phylogenetic community analyses

RANDOM

observed value

The observed value is significantly greater than the null expectation under competition

Freq

uenc

y

Page 22: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Environmental filteringCompetitive interactions

Over-dispersion Under-dispersion

Webb et al. 2002 Annu Rev Ecol Syst

Page 23: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Null models in phylogenetic community analyses

RANDOM

observed value

The observed value is significantly less than the null expectation under environmental filtering

Freq

uenc

y

Page 24: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Environmental filteringCompetitive interactions

Over-dispersion Under-dispersion

Phylogenetic patterns actually tend to be weak, or are inconsistent with Webb et al.’s predictions when the ecological mechanisms are known. WHY?

Page 25: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Problem: differences can promote or preclude coexistence via competition alone

Stabilizing differencespromote coexistence

Fitness differenceslimit coexistence

Chesson 2000; Adler et al. 2006 Ecol Lett

per c

apita

gro

wth

rate

per c

apita

gro

wth

rate

rare common rare common

Page 26: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Evolutionary trajectories of stabilizing (ρ) to fitness (κ) differences

Mayfield & Levine 2010 Eco Lett

Coex

isten

ce m

etric

ρ /Δ

κ)

Phylogenetic distance

stab. diffsevolve faster

COEXISTENCE ZONE

EXCLUSIONZONE

Page 27: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture
Page 28: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Estimating stabilizing (ρ) to fitness (κ) differences in a competition experiment

Experimentally estimate competition coefficients and finite rates of increase, and subthose into equations that calculate stabilizing and fitness differences

Page 29: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

20 40 60 80

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

Phylogenetic distance (mya)

Stab

ilizi

ng d

iffer

ence

20 40 60 80

0

10

20

30

40

Phylogenetic distance (mya)

Fitn

ess

diffe

renc

e

Our results: stabilizing and fitness differences evolve at similar rates

Close relatives: stabilizing and fitness differences minimalDistant relatives: stabilizing and fitness differences large

Page 30: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

Coexistence is equally likely between close and distant relatives – phylogenetic overdispersion via competition

Coexistence is equally likely between close and distant relatives

Our results: stabilizing (ρ) and fitness (κ) differences evolve at similar rates

Coex

isten

ce m

etric

ρ /Δ

κ)

Phylogenetic distance

stab. diffsevolve faster(Webb et al.)COEXISTENCE

ZONE

EXCLUSIONZONE

stab. and fit. diffsevolve at similar rates (our results)

Page 31: EEB 321 Community Ecology: phylogenetics lecture

The dynamic interplay between ecology and evolution

Evolution Ecology

We have really only scratched the surface of this question!