Variation in Resource Environment Drives Adaptive Divergence in Drosophila melanogaster

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Abstract

Natural populations often experience heterogeneity in the quality and abundance of environmentally acquired resources across both space and time, and this variation can influence population demographics and evolutionary dynamics. In this study, we directly manipulated diet in replicate populations of Drosophila melanogaster cultured in experimental mesocosms in the field. We found no significant effect of resource variation on demographic patterns. Furthermore, while resource variation altered the patterns of phenotypic and genomic evolution, this effect is secondary to population responses to seasonally fluctuating selective pressures. Seasonal adaptation was observed for all traits assayed and elicited genome-wide signatures of selection; in contrast, adaptation to the resource environment was trait-specific and exhibited an oligogenic architecture. This illustrates the capacity of populations to adapt to a specific axis of variation (the resource environment) without hindering the adaptive response to seasonal change. This in turn, suggests that resource variation may be an important force driving fluctuating selection across natural populations, ultimately contributing to the maintenance of genetic and phenotypic variation.

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