Keller Lukas F, Grant Peter R, Grant B Rosemary, Petren Kenneth
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, New Jersey 08544, USA.
Evolution. 2002 Jun;56(6):1229-39. doi: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb01434.x.
Understanding the fitness consequences of inbreeding (inbreeding depression) is of importance to evolutionary and conservation biology. There is ample evidence for inbreeding depression in captivity, and data from wild populations are accumulating. However, we still lack a good quantitative understanding of inbreeding depression and what influences its magnitude in natural populations. Specifically, the relationship between the magnitude of inbreeding depression and environmental severity is unclear. We quantified inbreeding depression in survival and reproduction in populations of cactus finches (Geospiza scandens) and medium ground finches (Geospiza fortis) living on Isla Daphne Major in the Galápagos Archipelago. Our analyses showed that inbreeding strongly reduced the recruitment probability (probability of breeding given that an adult is alive) in both species. Additionally, in G. scandens, first-year survival of an offspring with f = 0.25 was reduced by 21% and adults with f = 0.25 experienced a 45% reduction in their annual probability of survival. The magnitude of inbreeding depression in both adult and juvenile survival of this species was strongly modified by two environmental conditions, food availability and number of competitors. In juveniles, inbreeding depression was only present in years with low food availability, and in adults inbreeding depression was five times more severe in years with low food availability and large population sizes. The combination of relatively severe inbreeding depression in survival and the reduced recruitment probability led to the fact that very few inbred G. scandens ever succeeded in breeding. Other than recruitment probability, no other trait showed evidence of inbreeding depression in G. fortis, probably for two reasons: a relatively high rate of extrapair paternity (20%), which may lead to an underestimate of the apparent inbreeding depression, and low sample sizes of highly inbred G. fortis, which leads to low statistical power. Using data from juvenile survival, we estimated the number of lethal equivalents carried by G. scandens, G. fortis, and another congener, G. magnirostris. These results suggest that substantial inbreeding depression can exist in insular populations of birds, and that the magnitude of the inbreeding depression is a function of environmental conditions.
了解近亲繁殖的适应性后果(近亲繁殖衰退)对于进化生物学和保护生物学至关重要。圈养环境中有大量关于近亲繁殖衰退的证据,来自野生种群的数据也在不断积累。然而,我们仍然缺乏对近亲繁殖衰退及其在自然种群中影响程度的良好定量理解。具体而言,近亲繁殖衰退程度与环境严酷性之间的关系尚不清楚。我们对生活在加拉帕戈斯群岛达芙妮主岛上的仙人掌雀(Geospiza scandens)和中型地雀(Geospiza fortis)种群的生存和繁殖中的近亲繁殖衰退进行了量化。我们的分析表明,近亲繁殖在很大程度上降低了这两个物种的补充概率(成年个体存活情况下繁殖的概率)。此外,在仙人掌雀中,近亲系数f = 0.25的后代第一年存活率降低了21%,近亲系数f = 0.25的成年个体年存活概率降低了45%。该物种成年和幼年生存中近亲繁殖衰退的程度受到食物可获得性和竞争者数量这两个环境条件的强烈影响。在幼年个体中,近亲繁殖衰退仅在食物可获得性低的年份出现,而在成年个体中,近亲繁殖衰退在食物可获得性低且种群规模大的年份要严重五倍。生存中相对严重的近亲繁殖衰退与降低的补充概率相结合,导致很少有近亲繁殖的仙人掌雀能够成功繁殖。除了补充概率外,中型地雀没有其他性状显示出近亲繁殖衰退的迹象,可能有两个原因:相对较高的配偶外父权率(20%),这可能导致对明显的近亲繁殖衰退估计不足,以及高度近亲繁殖的中型地雀样本量小,导致统计效力低。利用幼年生存数据,我们估计了仙人掌雀、中型地雀以及另一个同属物种大嘴地雀(Geospiza magnirostris)携带的致死当量数量。这些结果表明,岛屿鸟类种群中可能存在大量的近亲繁殖衰退,并且近亲繁殖衰退的程度是环境条件的函数。