Yamahira Kazunori, Kawajiri Maiko, Takeshi Kenichi, Irie Takahiro
Department of Environmental Science, Faculty of Science, Niigata University, Ikarashi-2, Niigata 950-2181, Japan.
Evolution. 2007 Jul;61(7):1577-89. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00130.x.
In ectotherms, lower temperatures in high-latitude environments would theoretically reduce the annual growth rates of individuals. If slower growth and resultant smaller body size reduce fitness, individuals in higher latitudes may evolve compensatory responses. Two alternative models of such latitudinal compensation are possible: Model I: thermal reaction norms for growth rates of high-latitude individuals may be horizontally shifted to a lower range of temperatures, or Model II: reaction norms may be vertically shifted so that high-latitude individuals can grow faster across all temperatures. Model I is expected when annual growth rates in the wild are only a function of environmental temperatures, whereas Model II is expected when individuals in higher latitudes can only grow during a shorter period of a year. A variety of mixed strategies of these two models are also possible, and the magnitude of horizontal versus vertical variation in reaction norms among latitudinal populations will be indicative of the importance of "temperature" versus "seasonality" in the evolution of latitudinal compensation. However, the form of latitudinal compensation may be affected by possible genetic constraints due to the genetic architecture of reaction norms. In this study, we examine the inter- and intrapopulation variations in thermal reaction norms for growth rate of the medaka fish Oryzias latipes. Common-environment experiments revealed that average reaction norms differed primarily in elevation among latitudinal populations in a manner consistent with Model II (adaptation to "seasonality"), suggesting that natural selection in high latitudes prefers individuals that grow faster even within a shorter growing season to individuals that have longer growing seasons by growing at lower temperatures. However, intrapopulation variation in reaction norms was also vertical: some full-sibling families grew faster than others across all temperatures examined. This tendency in intrapopulation genetic variation for thermal reaction norms may have restricted the evolution of latitudinal compensation, irrespective of the underlying selection pressure.
在变温动物中,高纬度环境中较低的温度理论上会降低个体的年生长率。如果生长缓慢以及由此导致的体型较小会降低适合度,那么高纬度地区的个体可能会进化出补偿性反应。这种纬度补偿可能有两种替代模型:模型I:高纬度个体生长率的热反应规范可能会水平转移到较低的温度范围;或者模型II:反应规范可能会垂直转移,以便高纬度个体在所有温度下都能生长得更快。当野外的年生长率仅为环境温度的函数时,预计会出现模型I;而当高纬度地区的个体只能在一年中的较短时期内生长时,则预计会出现模型II。这两种模型的各种混合策略也是可能的,纬度种群之间反应规范的水平与垂直变化幅度将表明“温度”与“季节性”在纬度补偿进化中的重要性。然而,纬度补偿的形式可能会受到反应规范的遗传结构所导致的潜在遗传限制的影响。在本研究中,我们研究了青鳉鱼(Oryzias latipes)生长率的热反应规范在种群间和种群内的变化。共同环境实验表明,平均反应规范在纬度种群之间主要在海拔高度上有所不同,其方式与模型II(适应“季节性”)一致,这表明高纬度地区的自然选择更青睐那些即使在较短生长季节内也能快速生长的个体,而不是那些通过在较低温度下生长从而拥有较长生长季节的个体。然而反应规范在种群内的变化也是垂直的:在所有检测的温度下,一些全同胞家系比其他家系生长得更快。热反应规范在种群内遗传变异的这种趋势可能限制了纬度补偿的进化,而与潜在的选择压力无关。