Kingsolver Joel G, Pfennig David W
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599, USA.
Evolution. 2004 Jul;58(7):1608-12. doi: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2004.tb01740.x.
Cope's rule, the tendency for species within a lineage to evolve towards larger body size, has been widely reported in the fossil record, but the mechanisms leading to such phyletic size increase remain unclear. Here we show that selection acting on individual organisms generally favors larger body size. We performed an analysis of the strength of directional selection on size compared with other quantitative traits by evaluating 854 selection estimates from 42 studies of contemporaneous natural populations. For size, more than 79% of selection estimates exceed zero, whereas for other morphological traits positive and negative values are similar in frequency. The selective advantage of increased size occurs for traits implicated in both natural selection (e.g., differences in survival) and sexual selection (e.g., differences in mating success). The predominance of positive directional selection on size within populations could translate into a macroevolutionary trend toward increased size and thereby explain Cope's rule.
柯普法则指出,一个谱系中的物种有朝着更大体型进化的趋势,这在化石记录中已有广泛报道,但导致这种系统发育体型增大的机制仍不清楚。在这里,我们表明作用于个体生物体的选择通常有利于更大的体型。我们通过评估来自42项当代自然种群研究的854个选择估计值,对体型与其他数量性状的定向选择强度进行了分析。对于体型,超过79%的选择估计值超过零,而对于其他形态性状,正值和负值的出现频率相似。体型增大的选择优势出现在与自然选择(如生存差异)和性选择(如交配成功率差异)相关的性状中。种群内对体型的正向定向选择占主导地位可能会转化为体型增大的宏观进化趋势,从而解释柯普法则。