Jones Laura E, Ellner Stephen P
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
J Math Biol. 2007 Oct;55(4):541-73. doi: 10.1007/s00285-007-0094-6. Epub 2007 May 5.
We study the qualitative properties of population cycles in a predator-prey system where genetic variability allows contemporary rapid evolution of the prey. Previous numerical studies have found that prey evolution in response to changing predation risk can have major quantitative and qualitative effects on predator-prey cycles, including: (1) large increases in cycle period, (2) changes in phase relations (so that predator and prey are cycling exactly out of phase, rather than the classical quarter-period phase lag), and (3) "cryptic" cycles in which total prey density remains nearly constant while predator density and prey traits cycle. Here we focus on a chemostat model motivated by our experimental system (Fussmann et al. in Science 290:1358-1360, 2000; Yoshida et al. in Proc roy Soc Lond B 424:303-306, 2003) with algae (prey) and rotifers (predators), in which the prey exhibit rapid evolution in their level of defense against predation. We show that the effects of rapid prey evolution are robust and general, and furthermore that they occur in a specific but biologically relevant region of parameter space: when traits that greatly reduce predation risk are relatively cheap (in terms of reductions in other fitness components), when there is coexistence between the two prey types and the predator, and when the interaction between predators and undefended prey alone would produce cycles. Because defense has been shown to be inexpensive, even cost-free, in a number of systems (Andersson et al. in Curr Opin Microbiol 2:489-493, 1999: Gagneux et al. in Science 312:1944-1946, 2006; Yoshida et al. in Proc Roy Soc Lond B 271:1947-1953, 2004), our discoveries may well be reproduced in other model systems, and in nature. Finally, some of our key results are extended to a general model in which functional forms for the predation rate and prey birth rate are not specified.
我们研究了一个捕食者 - 猎物系统中种群周期的定性性质,在该系统中,遗传变异性使得猎物能够进行当代快速进化。先前的数值研究发现,猎物针对不断变化的捕食风险所进行的进化,可能对捕食者 - 猎物周期产生重大的定量和定性影响,包括:(1)周期大幅延长,(2)相位关系改变(使得捕食者和猎物的周期恰好完全不同步,而非经典的四分之一周期相位滞后),以及(3)“隐性”周期,即总猎物密度几乎保持恒定,而捕食者密度和猎物特征呈周期性变化。在此,我们聚焦于一个由我们的实验系统(Fussmann等人,《科学》290:1358 - 1360,2000;Yoshida等人,《英国皇家学会学报B》424:303 - 306,2003)所推动的恒化器模型,该模型中有藻类(猎物)和轮虫(捕食者),其中猎物在抵御捕食的水平上表现出快速进化。我们表明,猎物快速进化的影响是稳健且普遍的,而且它们发生在参数空间中一个特定但具有生物学相关性的区域:当大幅降低捕食风险的特征相对成本较低时(就其他适合度成分的降低而言),当两种猎物类型与捕食者共存时,以及当仅捕食者与未设防猎物之间的相互作用就会产生周期时。因为在许多系统中(Andersson等人,《当代微生物学观点》2:489 - 493,1999;Gagneux等人,《科学》312:1944 - 1946,2006;Yoshida等人,《英国皇家学会学报B》271:1947 - 1953,2004),防御已被证明成本低廉,甚至是无成本的,所以我们的发现很可能在其他模型系统以及自然界中得到重现。最后,我们的一些关键结果被扩展到一个一般模型,在该模型中未指定捕食率和猎物出生率的函数形式。