Langerhans R Brian, Layman Craig A, Shokrollahi A Mona, DeWitt Thomas J
Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843-2258, USA.
Evolution. 2004 Oct;58(10):2305-18. doi: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2004.tb01605.x.
Predation is heterogeneously distributed across space and time, and is presumed to represent a major source of evolutionary diversification. In fishes, fast-starts--sudden, high-energy swimming bursts--are often important in avoiding capture during a predator strike. Thus, in the presence of predators, we might expect evolution of morphological features that facilitate increased fast-start speed. We tested this hypothesis using populations of western mosquitofish (Gambusia affinis) that differed in level of predation by piscivorous fish. Body morphology of G. affinis males, females, and juveniles diverged in a consistent manner between predatory environments. Fish collected from predator populations exhibited a larger caudal region, smaller head, more elongate body, and a posterior, ventral position of the eye relative to fish from predator-free populations. Divergence in body shape largely matched a priori predictions based on biomechanical principles, and was evident across space (multiple populations) and time (multiple years). We measured maximum burst-swimming speed for male mosquitofish and found that individuals from predator populations produced faster bursts than fish from predator-free populations (about 20% faster). Biomechanical models of fish swimming and intrapopulation morphology-speed correlations suggested that body shape differences were largely responsible for enhanced locomotor performance in fish from predator populations. Morphological differences also persisted in offspring raised in a common laboratory environment, suggesting a heritable component to the observed morphological divergence. Taken together, these results strongly support the hypothesis that divergent selection between predator regimes has produced the observed phenotypic differences among populations of G. affinis. Based on biomechanical principles and recent findings in other species, it appears that the general ecomorphological model described in this paper will apply for many aquatic taxa, and provide insight into the role of predators in shaping the body form of prey organisms.
捕食在空间和时间上分布不均,被认为是进化多样化的一个主要来源。在鱼类中,快速启动——突然的、高能量的游泳爆发——在躲避捕食者攻击时通常很重要。因此,在有捕食者的情况下,我们可能会预期有利于提高快速启动速度的形态特征会进化。我们使用了食鱼性鱼类捕食水平不同的西部食蚊鱼(盖氏食蚊鱼)种群来检验这一假设。在捕食环境中,盖氏食蚊鱼的雄性、雌性和幼鱼的身体形态以一致的方式发生了分化。与来自无捕食者种群的鱼相比,从有捕食者种群中收集的鱼表现出更大的尾部区域、更小的头部、更细长的身体,以及眼睛相对于身体后部和腹部的位置。体型的差异在很大程度上与基于生物力学原理的先验预测相匹配,并且在空间(多个种群)和时间(多年)上都很明显。我们测量了雄性食蚊鱼的最大爆发游泳速度,发现来自有捕食者种群的个体比来自无捕食者种群的鱼产生更快的爆发速度(快约20%)。鱼类游泳的生物力学模型和种群内形态与速度的相关性表明,体型差异在很大程度上导致了有捕食者种群的鱼运动性能的提高。在共同实验室环境中饲养的后代中,形态差异也持续存在,这表明观察到的形态分化具有遗传成分。综上所述,这些结果有力地支持了以下假设:捕食者环境之间的差异选择导致了盖氏食蚊鱼种群之间观察到的表型差异。基于生物力学原理和其他物种的最新发现,本文描述的一般生态形态模型似乎适用于许多水生类群,并为捕食者在塑造猎物身体形态中的作用提供了见解。