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National Science Foundation Award #0550245

The evolution of feeding tolerance for chemically-rich seaweeds among herbivore populations: a tropical-temperate contrast

 
Investigator(s): Erik Sotka (PI)
Sponsor: College of Charleston, SC 29424 8439535673
Start Date/Expiration Date 2006-05-01 to 2009-04-30 (amended 2006-04-18)
Awarded Amount to Date: $316,557
Abstract: The past 25 years of research on seaweed-herbivore interactions have witnessed remarkable advances in our understanding of seaweed defenses, the chemical and morphological mechanisms that seaweeds use to protect themselves from being consumed by their herbivores. In contrast, we have relatively less information on the proximate and ultimate mechanisms sculpting the evolution of herbivore feeding preference and tolerance for seaweed defenses. As an example, there is a mountain of evidence that tropical seaweeds produce greater types and quantities of seaweed chemical defenses than temperate seaweeds. In contrast, there is little direct evidence on whether tropical herbivores have evolved greater feeding preferences for, and juvenile performance on, tropical seaweeds relative to temperate herbivores. Using a cross- disciplinary approach that includes field-sampling, laboratory-based feeding behavior assays, juvenile performance assays, biochemical manipulation and DNA sequencing, the investigator will directly compare the genetically based feeding responses of tropical and temperate populations toward chemically-rich tropical seaweeds. These experiments should lead the investigator to discern whether or not tropical seaweeds and herbivores are evolving in a diffuse co-evolutionary manner. The investigator will also perform selection experiments to assess whether evolving feeding tolerance for a chemically-rich seaweed comes at an energetic cost. The broader impacts include partnering with programs at College of Charleston and an NSF-funded Research Experience for Undergraduates program in order to train at least 10-15 undergraduates across three years. Graduate students will also be trained during the course of the project.
NSF Org: OCE - Division of Ocean Sciences
Award Number: 0550245
Award Instrument: Standard Grant
Program Manager: Phillip R. Taylor
OCE Division of Ocean Sciences
GEO Directorate for Geosciences
NSF Program(s): BIOLOGICAL OCEANOGRAPHY, EXP PROG TO STIM COMP RES
Field Application(s): Oceanography
Program Reference Code(s): EXP PROG TO STIM COMP RES, 9150
MARINE BIOTECHNOLOGY, 9117
RES IN UNDERGRAD INST-RESEARCH, 9229
Program Element Code(s): 1650
EXP PROG TO STIM COMP RES, 9150