E&E Seminar: How intraspecific variation, phenotypic plasticity, and rapid evolution influence the maintenance of species diversity

Understanding how diversity is maintained in biological systems is a fundamental problem in biology. When addressing this problem, ecologists tend to focus on mechanisms that maintain species diversity, while typically ignoring the ecological and evolutionary consequences of diversity within species. In three short stories, I will show why this is a mistake. Counterintuitively, differences between individuals within species make it more difficult to maintain species diversity, phenotypic plasticity promotes species diversity maintenance where it would otherwise not be possible, and rapid evolution alters expectations for species diversity maintenance but not according to the predictions of classic evolutionary theory. In sum, understanding how diversity is maintained requires consideration of the causes and consequences of diversity occurring at different levels of biological organization.

Biography

I am a Lecturer in Quantitative Biology at the University of Queensland. My research group focuses on the processes driving the rise and fall of populations of animals and plants over time. Recent and continuing work focuses on the influence of rapid evolution on population and community dynamics. New work focuses on dramatic ecology – identifying, understanding, and predicting large, rapid, sometimes unprecedented, and often consequential changes, in population and community dynamics.

 

Updated:  11 May 2023/Responsible Officer:  Web Services/Page Contact:  Web Services