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Full-Text Articles in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Extreme Morphology, Functional Trade-Offs, And Evolutionary Dynamics In A Clade Of Open-Ocean Fishes (Perciformes: Bramidae), Michelle C. Gilbert, Andrew J. Conith, Catherine S. Lerose, Joshua K. Moyer, Steve H. Huskey, R. Craig Albertson
Extreme Morphology, Functional Trade-Offs, And Evolutionary Dynamics In A Clade Of Open-Ocean Fishes (Perciformes: Bramidae), Michelle C. Gilbert, Andrew J. Conith, Catherine S. Lerose, Joshua K. Moyer, Steve H. Huskey, R. Craig Albertson
Biology Department Faculty Publication Series
Synopsis When novel or extreme morphologies arise, they are oft met with the burden of functional trade-offs in other aspects of anatomy, which may limit phenotypic diversification and make particular adaptive peaks inaccessible. Bramids (Perciformes: Bramidae) comprise a small family of 20 extant species of fishes, which are distributed throughout pelagic waters worldwide. Within the Bramidae, the fanfishes (Pteraclis and Pterycombus) differ morphologically from the generally stout, laterally compressed species that typify the family. Instead, Pteraclis and Pterycombus exhibit extreme anterior positioning of the dorsal fin onto the craniofacial skeleton. Consequently, they possess fin and skull anatomies that are radically …
Sex-Biased Oviposition By A Nursery Pollinator On A Gynodioecious Host Plant: Implications For Breeding System Evolution And Evolution Of Mutualism, Laura A. D. Doubleday, Lynn S. Adler
Sex-Biased Oviposition By A Nursery Pollinator On A Gynodioecious Host Plant: Implications For Breeding System Evolution And Evolution Of Mutualism, Laura A. D. Doubleday, Lynn S. Adler
Biology Department Faculty Publication Series
Dioecy, a breeding system where individual plants are exclusively male or female, has evolved repeatedly. Extensive theory describes when dioecy should arise from hermaphroditism, frequently through gynodioecy, where females and hermaphrodites coexist, and when gynodioecy should be stable. Both pollinators and herbivores often prefer the pollen-bearing sex, with sex-specific fitness effects that can affect breeding system evolution. Nursery pollination, where adult insects pollinate flowers but their larvae feed on plant reproductive tissues, is a model for understanding mutualism evolution but could also yield insights into plant breeding system evolution. We studied a recently established nursery pollination interaction between native Hadena …