Meiri Shai, Cooper Natalie, Purvis Andy
NERC Centre for Population Biology, Imperial College London, Silwood Park Campus, Ascot, Berkshire SL5 7PY, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2008 Jan 22;275(1631):141-8. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2007.1056.
The island rule is a hypothesis whereby small mammals evolve larger size on islands while large insular mammals dwarf. The rule is believed to emanate from small mammals growing larger to control more resources and enhance metabolic efficiency, while large mammals evolve smaller size to reduce resource requirements and increase reproductive output. We show that there is no evidence for the existence of the island rule when phylogenetic comparative methods are applied to a large, high-quality dataset. Rather, there are just a few clade-specific patterns: carnivores; heteromyid rodents; and artiodactyls typically evolve smaller size on islands whereas murid rodents usually grow larger. The island rule is probably an artefact of comparing distantly related groups showing clade-specific responses to insularity. Instead of a rule, size evolution on islands is likely to be governed by the biotic and abiotic characteristics of different islands, the biology of the species in question and contingency.
岛屿法则是一种假说,即小型哺乳动物在岛屿上进化出更大的体型,而大型岛屿哺乳动物则会侏儒化。该法则被认为源于小型哺乳动物体型变大以控制更多资源并提高代谢效率,而大型哺乳动物则进化出较小的体型以减少资源需求并增加繁殖产出。我们表明,当将系统发育比较方法应用于一个大型、高质量数据集时,没有证据支持岛屿法则的存在。相反,只有一些特定类群的模式:食肉动物、异鼠科啮齿动物和偶蹄目动物通常在岛屿上进化出较小的体型,而鼠科啮齿动物通常体型变大。岛屿法则可能是比较远缘类群时产生的人为现象,这些类群对岛屿化表现出特定类群的反应。岛屿上的体型进化很可能不是由法则支配,而是受不同岛屿的生物和非生物特征、相关物种的生物学特性以及偶然性的影响。