Growth-defense trade-offs promote habitat isolation between
recently-diverged species
Abstract
Trade-offs are crucial for species divergence and reproductive
isolation. Trade-offs between investment in growth versus defense
against herbivores are implicated in tropical forest diversity.
Empirically exploring the role of growth-defense trade-offs in closely
related species’ reproductive isolation can clarify the eco-evolutionary
dynamics through which growth-defense trade-offs contribute to
diversity. Costus villosissimus and C. allenii are recently diverged,
interfertile, and partially sympatric neotropical understory plant
species primarily isolated by divergent habitat adaptation. This
divergent adaptation involves differences in growth rate, which may
constrain investment in defense. Here, we investigate growth-defense
trade-offs and how they relate to the divergent habitat adaptation that
isolates these species. We characterize leaf toughness and chemistry,
evaluate the feeding preferences of primary beetle herbivores in
controlled trials and field-based experiments, and investigate natural
herbivory patterns. We find clear trade-offs between growth and defense:
slower-growing C. allenii has tougher leaves and higher defensive
chemical concentrations than faster-growing C. villosissimus. Costus
villosissimus has rapid growth-based drought avoidance, enabling growth
in drier habitats with few specialist herbivores. Therefore,
growth-defense trade-offs mediate synergistic biotic and abiotic
selection, causing the divergent habitat adaptation that prevents most
interspecific mating between C. villosissimus and C. allenii. Our
findings advance understanding of ecological speciation by highlighting
the interplay of biotic and abiotic selection that dictates the outcome
of trade-offs.