Podos J
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721, USA.
Nature. 2001 Jan 11;409(6817):185-8. doi: 10.1038/35051570.
Speciation in many animal taxa is catalysed by the evolutionary diversification of mating signals. According to classical theories of speciation, mating signals diversify, in part, as an incidental byproduct of adaptation by natural selection to divergent ecologies, although empirical evidence in support of this hypothesis has been limited. Here I show, in Darwin's finches of the Galápagos Islands, that diversification of beak morphology and body size has shaped patterns of vocal signal evolution, such that birds with large beaks and body sizes have evolved songs with comparatively low rates of syllable repetition and narrow frequency bandwidths. The converse is true for small birds. Patterns of correlated evolution among morphology and song are consistent with the hypothesis that beak morphology constrains vocal evolution, with different beak morphologies differentially limiting a bird's ability to modulate vocal tract configurations during song production. These data illustrate how morphological adaptation may drive signal evolution and reproductive isolation, and furthermore identify a possible cause for rapid speciation in Darwin's finches.
许多动物类群的物种形成是由交配信号的进化多样化所催化的。根据经典的物种形成理论,交配信号的多样化部分是自然选择使生物适应不同生态环境时产生的附带副产品,尽管支持这一假设的实证证据有限。在此,我在加拉帕戈斯群岛的达尔文雀中发现,喙形态和体型的多样化塑造了声音信号的进化模式,即喙大且体型大的鸟类进化出了音节重复率相对较低且频率带宽较窄的歌声。小鸟的情况则相反。形态与歌声之间的协同进化模式与以下假设一致:喙的形态限制了声音进化,不同的喙形态对鸟类在唱歌时调节声道结构的能力有不同程度的限制。这些数据说明了形态适应如何推动信号进化和生殖隔离,进而确定了达尔文雀快速物种形成的一个可能原因。