Published September 29, 2016 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Evolutionary Diversification of Prey and Predator Species Facilitated by Asymmetric Interactions

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. Heilongjiang University
  • 3. China University of Geosciences

Description

We investigate the influence of asymmetric interactions on coevolutionary dynamics of a predator-prey system by using the theory of adaptive dynamics. We assume that the defense ability of prey and the attack ability of predators all can adaptively evolve, either caused by phenotypic plasticity or by behavioral choice, but there are certain costs in terms of their growth rate or death rate. The coevolutionary model is constructed from a deterministic approximation of random mutation-selection process. To sum up, if prey's trade-off curve is globally weakly concave, then five outcomes of coevolution are demonstrated, which depend on the intensity and shape of asymmetric predator-prey interactions and predator's trade-off shape. Firstly, we find that if there is a weakly decelerating cost and a weakly accelerating benefit for predator species, then evolutionary branching in the predator species may occur, but after branching further coevolution may lead to extinction of the predator species with a larger trait value. However, if there is a weakly accelerating cost and a weakly accelerating benefit for predator species, then evolutionary branching in the predator species is also possible and after branching the dimorphic predator can evolutionarily stably coexist with a monomorphic prey species. Secondly, if the asymmetric interactions become a little strong, then prey and predators will evolve to an evolutionarily stable equilibrium, at which they can stably coexist on a long-term timescale of evolution. Thirdly, if there is a weakly accelerating cost and a relatively strongly accelerating benefit for prey species, then evolutionary branching in the prey species is possible and the finally coevolutionary outcome contains a dimorphic prey and a monomorphic predator species. Fourthly, if the asymmetric interactions become more stronger, then predator-prey coevolution may lead to cycles in both traits and equilibrium population densities. The Red Queen dynamic is a possible outcome under asymmetric predator-prey interactions.

Data availability

All relevant data are within the paper and its Supporting Information files.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0163753
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:6828

Funding

National Natural Science Foundation of China
11201368
National Natural Science Foundation of China
11571272
National Natural Science Foundation of China
11401182
National Natural Science Foundation of China
11571326
China Scholarship Council
201506285164
Natural Science Foundation of Shaanxi Province
2015JQ1011
China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
2014M560755

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ecology and Evolution