Grant Peter R, Grant B Rosemary
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544-1003, USA.
Science. 2006 Jul 14;313(5784):224-6. doi: 10.1126/science.1128374.
Competitor species can have evolutionary effects on each other that result in ecological character displacement; that is, divergence in resource-exploiting traits such as jaws and beaks. Nevertheless, the process of character displacement occurring in nature, from the initial encounter of competitors to the evolutionary change in one or more of them, has not previously been investigated. Here we report that a Darwin's finch species (Geospiza fortis) on an undisturbed Galápagos island diverged in beak size from a competitor species (G. magnirostris) 22 years after the competitor's arrival, when they jointly and severely depleted the food supply. The observed evolutionary response to natural selection was the strongest recorded in 33 years of study, and close to the value predicted from the high heritability of beak size. These findings support the role of competition in models of community assembly, speciation, and adaptive radiations.
竞争物种之间会产生相互的进化影响,从而导致生态位分化;也就是说,在诸如颌骨和喙等资源利用特征上出现差异。然而,自然界中发生的生态位分化过程,从竞争者最初相遇,到其中一个或多个物种发生进化改变,此前尚未得到研究。在此我们报告,在一座未受干扰的加拉帕戈斯岛上,一种达尔文雀(勇地雀)在竞争物种(大嘴地雀)到来22年后,其喙的大小与竞争物种出现了分化,此时它们共同且严重地耗尽了食物供应。在33年的研究中,观察到的对自然选择的进化反应是最强的,且接近根据喙大小的高遗传力预测的值。这些发现支持了竞争在群落组装、物种形成和适应性辐射模型中的作用。