Gorman K B, Williams T D
Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5A 1S6.
Biol Lett. 2005 Dec 22;1(4):461-4. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2005.0346.
Recent studies on hormone-mediated maternal effects in birds have highlighted the influence of variable maternal yolk androgen concentration on offspring phenotype, particularly in terms of early development. If genetic differences between laying females regulate variation in yolk hormone concentration, then this physiological maternal effect is an indirect genetic effect which can provide a basis for the co-evolution of maternal and offspring phenotypes. Thus, we investigated the evolutionary associations between maternally derived yolk testosterone (T) and early developmental traits in passerine birds via a comparative, phylogenetic analysis. Our results from species-correlation and independent contrasts analyses provide convergent evidence for the correlated evolution of maternal yolk T concentration and length of the prenatal developmental period in passerines. Here, we show these traits are significantly negatively associated (species-correlation: p<0.001, r2=0.85; independent contrasts: p=0.005). Our results highlight the need for more studies investigating the role of yolk hormones in evolutionary processes concerning maternal effects.
近期关于鸟类激素介导的母体效应的研究强调了母体卵黄雄激素浓度变化对后代表型的影响,特别是在早期发育方面。如果产卵雌鸟之间的遗传差异调节了卵黄激素浓度的变化,那么这种生理母体效应就是一种间接遗传效应,它可以为母体和后代表型的共同进化提供基础。因此,我们通过比较系统发育分析,研究了雀形目鸟类母体来源的卵黄睾酮(T)与早期发育性状之间的进化关联。我们物种相关性分析和独立对比分析的结果为雀形目鸟类母体卵黄T浓度与产前发育时期长度的协同进化提供了一致的证据。在此,我们表明这些性状显著负相关(物种相关性:p<0.001,r2=0.85;独立对比:p=0.005)。我们的结果凸显了需要更多研究来调查卵黄激素在涉及母体效应的进化过程中的作用。