Mueller L D, Guo P Z, Ayala F J
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine 92717.
Science. 1991 Jul 26;253(5018):433-5. doi: 10.1126/science.1907401.
Theories of density-dependent natural selection state that at extreme population densities evolution produces alternative life histories due to trade-offs. The trade-offs are presumed to arise because those genotypes with highest fitness at high population densities will not also have high fitness at low density and vice-versa. These predictions were tested by taking samples from six populations of Drosophila melanogaster kept at low population densities (r-populations) for nearly 200 generations and placing them in crowded cultures (K-populations). After 25 generations in the crowded cultures, the derived K-populations showed growth rate and productivity that at high densities were elevated relative to the controls, but at low density were depressed.
密度依赖型自然选择理论指出,在极端种群密度下,由于权衡取舍,进化会产生不同的生活史。据推测,这些权衡取舍之所以出现,是因为那些在高种群密度下具有最高适应性的基因型在低密度下不会也具有高适应性,反之亦然。通过从近200代保持低密度的六个黑腹果蝇种群(r种群)中取样,并将它们置于拥挤培养环境(K种群)中来检验这些预测。在拥挤培养环境中经过25代后,衍生出的K种群在高密度下的生长速率和生产力相对于对照组有所提高,但在低密度下则受到抑制。