Mumme Ronald L, Galatowitsch Mark L, Jabłoński Piotr G, Stawarczyk Tadeusz M, Cygan Jakub P
Department of Biology, Allegheny College, Meadville, Pennsylvania 16335-3902, USA.
Evolution. 2006 May;60(5):1086-97.
Geographic variation in the plumage pattern of birds is widespread but poorly understood, and in very few cases has its evolutionary significance been investigated experimentally. Neotropical warblers of the genus Myioborus use their contrasting black-and-white plumage to flush insect prey during animated foraging displays. Although previous experimental work has demonstrated that white plumage patches are critical to flush-pursuit foraging success, the amount of white in the plumage shows considerable interspecific and intraspecific geographic variation. We investigated the evolutionary significance of this geographic variation by experimentally decreasing or increasing the amount of white in the tail of slate-throated redstarts (Myioborus miniatus comptus) from Monteverde, Costa Rica, to mimic the natural extremes of tail pattern variation in this species. In addition to measuring the effects of plumage manipulation on foraging performance, we performed field experiments measuring the escape response of a common insect prey species (an asilid fly) using model redstarts representing four different Myioborus plumage patterns. Our experiments were designed to test four hypotheses that could explain geographic variation in plumage pattern. Compared to controls, experimental birds with reduced-white tails that mimic the plumage pattern of M. miniatus hellmayri of Guatemala showed significant reductions in flush-pursuit foraging performance. In contrast, the addition of white to the tail to mimic the plumage pattern of M. miniatus verticalis of Bolivia had no significant effect on foraging performance of Costa Rican redstarts. In field experiments with asilid flies, model redstarts simulating the plumage of M. miniatus comptus of Costa Rica and M. miniatus verticalis of Bolivia elicited greater responses than did models of other Myioborus taxa with either less or more white in the plumage. The results of our experiments with both birds and insects allow us to reject two hypotheses for geographic variation in plumage pattern: (1) that geographic variation is a nonadaptive result of genetic drift, and (2) that selection for enhanced flush-pursuit foraging performance generally favors increased white in the plumage, but evolutionary trade-offs constrain the evolution of extensive patches of white in some geographic regions. Instead, our results suggest that geographic variation in the plumage pattern of Myioborus redstarts reflects adaptation to regional habitat characteristics that enhances flush-pursuit foraging performance.
鸟类羽色模式的地理变异很普遍,但人们对此了解甚少,而且在极少数情况下对其进化意义进行过实验研究。Myioborus属的新热带莺类在活跃的觅食展示过程中,利用其对比鲜明的黑白羽色来惊起昆虫猎物。尽管先前的实验工作已证明白色羽斑对惊起追捕式觅食的成功至关重要,但羽色中的白色量在种间和种内都表现出相当大的地理变异。我们通过实验性地减少或增加来自哥斯达黎加蒙特维德的石板喉红尾鸲(Myioborus miniatus comptus)尾部的白色量,以模拟该物种尾部模式变异的自然极端情况,从而研究这种地理变异的进化意义。除了测量羽色操纵对觅食表现的影响外,我们还进行了野外实验,使用代表四种不同Myioborus羽色模式的模型红尾鸲,测量一种常见昆虫猎物物种(一种盗虻)的逃避反应。我们的实验旨在检验四个可以解释羽色模式地理变异的假设。与对照组相比,尾部白色减少从而模拟危地马拉的M. miniatus hellmayri羽色模式的实验鸟类,在惊起追捕式觅食表现上显著降低。相反,在尾部增加白色以模拟玻利维亚的M. miniatus verticalis羽色模式,对哥斯达黎加红尾鸲的觅食表现没有显著影响。在针对盗虻的野外实验中,模拟哥斯达黎加的M. miniatus comptus和玻利维亚的M. miniatus verticalis羽色的模型红尾鸲,比其他羽色中白色较少或较多的Myioborus类群的模型引发了更大的反应。我们对鸟类和昆虫的实验结果使我们能够否定关于羽色模式地理变异的两个假设:(1)地理变异是遗传漂变的非适应性结果;(2)对增强惊起追捕式觅食表现的选择通常有利于羽色中白色增加,但进化权衡限制了某些地理区域大片白色斑块的进化。相反,我们的结果表明,Myioborus红尾鸲羽色模式的地理变异反映了对区域栖息地特征的适应,这种适应增强了惊起追捕式觅食表现。