Odell Jason P, Chappell Mark A, Dickson Kathryn A
Department of Biology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2003 Oct;206(Pt 20):3707-18. doi: 10.1242/jeb.00613.
We examined the mechanistic basis for two whole-animal performance traits, aerobic capacity and burst speed, in six laboratory-reared Trinidadian guppy populations from different native drainages with contrasting levels of predation. Using within- and between-population variation, we tested whether variation in organs and organ systems (heart, gill and swimming motor mass) and the activities of several enzymes that support locomotion (citrate synthetase, lactate dehydrogenase and myofibrillar ATPase) are correlated with aerobic performance (maximum rates of oxygen consumption, (O(2)max)) or burst performance (maximum swim speed during escape responses). We also tested for associations between physiological traits and habitat type (different drainages and predation levels). Organ size and enzyme activities showed substantial size-independent variation, and both performance measures were strongly correlated to body size. After accounting for size effects, neither burst nor aerobic performance was strongly correlated to any organ size or enzymatic variable, or to each other. Two principal components (PCI, PC2) in both males and females accounted for most of the variance in the organ size and enzymatic variables. In both sexes, heart and gill mass tended to covary and were negatively associated with citrate synthetase and lactate dehydrogenase activity. In males (but not females), variation in aerobic performance was weakly but significantly correlated to variation in PC1, suggesting that heart and gill mass scale positively with (O(2)max). Neither of the component variables and no single morphological or enzymatic trait was correlated to burst speed in either sex. Evolutionary changes in important life history traits occur rapidly in guppy populations subjected to different predation intensities (high mortality in downstream sites inhabited by large predatory fish; low mortality in upstream sites lacking large predators). We found significant differences between stream drainages in all morphological variables and most enzymatic variables, but only the mass of the swimming motor and LDH activity were significantly affected by predation regime. Overall, our data show that microevolution has occurred in the physiological foundations of locomotor performance in guppies, but evolutionary changes in physiology do not closely correspond to the predation-induced changes in life history parameters.
我们研究了六个在实验室饲养的特立尼达孔雀鱼种群中两个整体动物性能特征——有氧能力和爆发速度的机制基础,这些种群来自不同的原生排水区域,其捕食水平各不相同。利用种群内和种群间的变异,我们测试了器官和器官系统(心脏、鳃和游泳运动质量)的变异以及几种支持运动的酶(柠檬酸合酶、乳酸脱氢酶和肌原纤维ATP酶)的活性是否与有氧性能(最大耗氧率,(O₂max))或爆发性能(逃避反应期间的最大游泳速度)相关。我们还测试了生理特征与栖息地类型(不同的排水区域和捕食水平)之间的关联。器官大小和酶活性表现出显著的与大小无关的变异,并且两种性能指标都与体型密切相关。在考虑了大小效应之后,爆发性能和有氧性能都与任何器官大小或酶变量没有强烈的相关性,彼此之间也没有强烈的相关性。雄性和雌性的两个主成分(PC1、PC2)解释了器官大小和酶变量的大部分变异。在两性中,心脏和鳃的质量往往共同变化,并且与柠檬酸合酶和乳酸脱氢酶活性呈负相关。在雄性(而非雌性)中,有氧性能的变异与PC1的变异呈弱但显著的相关性,这表明心脏和鳃的质量与(O₂max)呈正相关。在两性中,没有一个成分变量以及没有单一的形态或酶特征与爆发速度相关。在受到不同捕食强度的孔雀鱼种群中,重要生活史特征的进化变化迅速发生(下游有大型捕食性鱼类栖息的位点死亡率高;上游没有大型捕食者的位点死亡率低)。我们发现所有形态变量和大多数酶变量在不同溪流排水区域之间存在显著差异,但只有游泳运动质量和LDH活性受到捕食方式的显著影响。总体而言,我们的数据表明,孔雀鱼运动性能的生理基础已经发生了微进化,但生理上的进化变化与捕食诱导的生活史参数变化并不紧密对应。