Lyon Bruce E, Eadie John McA
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA.
Nature. 2004 Nov 18;432(7015):390-3. doi: 10.1038/nature03036.
Reciprocal selection pressures often lead to close and adaptive matching of traits in coevolved species. A failure of one species to match the evolutionary trajectories of another is often attributed to evolutionary lags or to differing selection pressures across a geographic mosaic. Here we show that mismatches in adaptation of interacting species--an obligate brood parasitic duck and each of its two main hosts--are best explained by the evolutionary dynamics within the host species. Rejection of the brood parasite's eggs was common by both hosts, despite a lack of detectable cost of parasitism to the hosts. Egg rejection markedly reduced parasite fitness, but egg mimicry experiments revealed no phenotypic natural selection for more mimetic parasitic eggs. These paradoxical results were resolved by the discovery of intraspecific brood parasitism and conspecific egg rejection within the hosts themselves. The apparent arms race between species seems instead to be an incidental by-product of within-species conflict, with little recourse for evolutionary response by the parasite.
相互的选择压力常常导致共同进化物种的性状紧密且适应性匹配。一个物种未能跟上另一个物种的进化轨迹,通常归因于进化滞后或地理镶嵌体上不同的选择压力。在这里,我们表明,相互作用物种(一种专性巢寄生鸭及其两个主要宿主)在适应性上的不匹配,最好用宿主物种内部的进化动态来解释。尽管寄生对宿主没有可检测到的代价,但两个宿主都普遍会拒绝巢寄生者的卵。拒绝卵显著降低了寄生者的适合度,但卵模拟实验表明,对于更具模拟性的寄生卵,没有表型自然选择。通过发现宿主自身存在种内巢寄生和同种卵拒绝现象,这些矛盾的结果得到了解决。物种间明显的军备竞赛似乎反而是种内冲突的一个附带副产品,寄生者几乎没有进化响应的办法。