Prudic Kathleen L, Oliver Jeffrey C
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2008 May 22;275(1639):1125-32. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2007.1766.
Batesian mimics gain protection from predation through the evolution of physical similarities to a model species that possesses anti-predator defences. This protection should not be effective in the absence of the model since the predator does not identify the mimic as potentially dangerous and both the model and the mimic are highly conspicuous. Thus, Batesian mimics should probably encounter strong predation pressure outside the geographical range of the model species. There are several documented examples of Batesian mimics occurring in locations without their models, but the evolutionary responses remain largely unidentified. A mimetic species has four alternative evolutionary responses to the loss of model presence. If predation is weak, it could maintain its mimetic signal. If predation is intense, it is widely presumed the mimic will go extinct. However, the mimic could also evolve a new colour pattern to mimic another model species or it could revert back to its ancestral, less conspicuous phenotype. We used molecular phylogenetic approaches to reconstruct and test the evolution of mimicry in the North American admiral butterflies (Limenitis: Nymphalidae). We confirmed that the more cryptic white-banded form is the ancestral phenotype of North American admiral butterflies. However, one species, Limenitis arthemis, evolved the black pipevine swallowtail mimetic form but later reverted to the white-banded more cryptic ancestral form. This character reversion is strongly correlated with the geographical absence of the model species and its host plant, but not the host plant distribution of L. arthemis. Our results support the prediction that a Batesian mimic does not persist in locations without its model, but it does not go extinct either. The mimic can revert back to its ancestral, less conspicuous form and persist.
贝氏拟态者通过进化出与具有反捕食防御能力的模式物种在外形上的相似性来获得免受捕食的保护。在没有模式物种的情况下,这种保护应该是无效的,因为捕食者不会将拟态者识别为潜在危险的,而且模式物种和拟态者都非常显眼。因此,贝氏拟态者在模式物种的地理分布范围之外可能会面临强大的捕食压力。有几个已记录的例子表明贝氏拟态者出现在没有其模式物种的地方,但进化反应在很大程度上仍未得到确认。一个拟态物种对模式物种消失有四种可供选择的进化反应。如果捕食压力较弱,它可以维持其拟态信号。如果捕食压力强烈,人们普遍认为拟态者将会灭绝。然而,拟态者也可以进化出一种新的颜色模式来模仿另一种模式物种,或者它可以恢复到其祖先的、不那么显眼的表型。我们使用分子系统发育方法来重建和测试北美蛱蝶(蛱蝶科:蛱蝶属)拟态的进化。我们证实,更隐秘的白带形态是北美蛱蝶的祖先表型。然而,一种蛱蝶,北美虎凤蝶,进化出了模仿黑凤蝶的形态,但后来又恢复到了更隐秘的白带祖先形态。这种特征逆转与模式物种及其寄主植物在地理上的缺失密切相关,但与北美虎凤蝶的寄主植物分布无关。我们的结果支持这样的预测,即贝氏拟态者在没有其模式物种的地方不会持续存在,但也不会灭绝。拟态者可以恢复到其祖先的、不那么显眼的形态并持续存在。