Welch John J
Institute of Evolutionary Biology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2009 Feb 22;276(1657):675-82. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2008.1180.
The island rule states that after island colonization, larger animals tend to evolve reduced body sizes and smaller animals increased sizes. Recently, there has been disagreement about how often, if ever, this rule applies in nature, and much of this disagreement stems from differences in the statistical tests employed. This study shows, how different tests of the island rule assume different null hypotheses, and that these rely on quite different biological assumptions. Analysis and simulation are then used to quantify the biases in the tests. Many widely used tests are shown to yield false support for the island rule when island and mainland evolution are indistinguishable, and so a Monte Carlo permutation test is introduced that avoids this problem. It is further shown that tests based on independent contrasts lack power to detect the island rule under certain conditions. Finally, a complete reanalysis is presented of recent data from primates. When head-body length is used as the measure of body size, reports of the island rule are shown to stem from methodological artefacts. But when skull length or body mass are used, all tests agree that the island rule does hold in primates.
岛屿法则指出,在岛屿殖民化之后,较大的动物往往会进化出更小的体型,而较小的动物则会进化出更大的体型。最近,对于这条法则在自然界中适用的频率(如果确实适用的话)存在分歧,而这种分歧很大程度上源于所采用的统计检验方法的差异。这项研究表明,对岛屿法则的不同检验假设了不同的零假设,并且这些假设依赖于截然不同的生物学假设。然后通过分析和模拟来量化检验中的偏差。结果表明,当岛屿和大陆的进化难以区分时,许多广泛使用的检验会对岛屿法则产生错误的支持,因此引入了一种蒙特卡洛排列检验来避免这个问题。进一步表明,基于独立对比的检验在某些条件下缺乏检测岛屿法则的能力。最后,对来自灵长类动物的近期数据进行了全面的重新分析。当使用头身长度作为体型的衡量标准时,关于岛屿法则的报告被证明源于方法上的人为因素。但是当使用头骨长度或体重时,所有检验都一致认为岛屿法则在灵长类动物中确实成立。