For next
week’s EXEB meeting we would like to discuss a paper on latent (‘White-Knight’)
traits recently published in Trends in Ecology & Evolution. Latent traits
are nonadaptiveOb where they originate but can become adaptive in new
environments. Wherever these traits are plentiful, ecology rather than genetics
might determine how fast new adaptations originate.
Fika will
be provided
When:
Tuesday, February 14, at 10.00
-Alexander
Title: The
White-Knight Hypothesis, or Does the Environment Limit Innovations?
Abstract: Organisms often harbor latent traits that
are byproducts of other adaptations. Such latent traits are not themselves
adaptive but can become adaptive in the right environment. Here I discuss
several examples of such traits. Their abundance suggests that environmental
change rather than new mutations might often limit the origin of evolutionary
adaptations and innovations. This is important, because environments can change
much faster than new mutations arise. I introduce a conceptual model that
distinguishes between mutation-limited and environment-limited trait origins
and suggest how experiments could help discriminate between them. Wherever
latent traits are plentiful, ecology rather than genetics might determine how
fast new adaptations originate and thus how fast adaptive Darwinian evolution
proceeds.
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