Metabolic rate, context-dependent selection, and the
colonisation-competition trade-off
Abstract
Metabolism sets the pace-of-life, co-varying with survival, growth and
reproduction. Metabolic rates should therefore be under strong selection
and, if heritable, become less variable over time. Yet intraspecific
variation in metabolic rates is ubiquitous, even after accounting for
body mass and temperature. Theory predicts variable selection maintains
trait variation but field estimates of how selection on metabolism
varies are rare. We use a model marine invertebrate to estimate
selection on metabolic rates in the wild under different competitive
environments. Fitness landscapes varied among environments separated by
a few centimetres: interspecific competition selected for higher
metabolism, and a faster pace-of-life, relative to competition-free
environments. Populations experience a mosaic of competitive regimes; we
find metabolism mediates a competition-colonisation trade-off across
these regimes. Spatial heterogeneity and the variable selection on
metabolic rates that it generates is likely to maintain variation in
metabolic rate, despite strong selection in any single environment.