Evolution, 55(12),
2001, pp. 2439-2454
FOUNDATIONS OF GREGARIOUSNESS: A DISPERSAL POLYMORPHISM
AMONG THE PLANKTONIC LARVAE OF A MARINE INVERTEBRATE
Robert
J. Toonen1,2 and Joseph R. Pawlik1
1 Department of Biological Sciences, Center for
Marine Science Research,
2 Present address: Center for
Population Biology,
Abstract - Theory predicts that selection
should favor genotypes that can vary their tendency to disperse in habitats
that are spatially or temporally variable or those that remain near their
carrying capacity, Although many marine habitats appear to fit these criteria,
confirmed examples of dispersal polymorphism among marine invertebrates are
exceedingly rare. Competent larvae of the gregarious tubeworm, Hydroides dianthus, settle specifically in
response to living conspecific worms, but a small
proportion of each spawn settle nonspecifically on uninhabited substrata
concurrently with their gregarious siblings. Here, using a parental half-sib
analysis, we show that the proportion of a spawn settling in response to
uninhabited biofilm is highly heritable. When
estimated as a continuous trait based on a one-way ANOV A, heritability is
estimated to be 0.83 ± 0.31. When founder production was analyzed as a
threshold trait, heritability was estimated to be 0.68 ± 0.10 based on the
breeding design experiment and 0.65 ± 0.09 based on the artificial selection
experiments. Realized heritability based on the selection experiments was
considerably lower, however (0.17 per generation and 0.02 cumulative).
Artificial selection was ineffectual at sequentially increasing the proportion
of founder larvae among inbred family lines, but after three generations of
selection, the proportion of larvae settling in response to biofilm
was significantly higher among inbred lines than among the field-collected
parents. The obligate planktonic larval stage common
among so many marine invertebrates is thought to preclude the evolution of
dispersal polymorphisms in these animals. Theoretical expectations of variable
dispersal may instead be realized through individual behavioral differences
resulting in differential transport or settlement preference, but this
possibility remains largely unexplored among marine invertebrates.
Key words.-
Bet-hedging, dispersal
polymorphism, gregarious settlement, Hydroides
dianthus, larval dispersal, polychaete.