Thomas Gavin H
NERC Centre for Population Biology, Imperial College London, Silwood Park, Ascot, Berkshire, UK.
Mol Ecol. 2009 Mar;18(6):1027-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2009.04083.x. Epub 2009 Feb 20.
The negative relationship between temperature and geographical variation in body size, or Bergmann's rule, is among the most thoroughly studied ecogeographical rules, yet the pattern and process underlying it remain controversial. Bergmann's original observations were of body size clines among endotherms, but in the last 50 years there has been increasing recognition that both Bergmann's rule and its reverse occur in many ectotherm taxa. A new study of syngnathid fish by Wilson (2009) in this issue of Molecular Ecology sheds light on intriguing alternative mechanisms that may explain variation in the direction of body size clines across taxa. Wilson shows that Bergmann's rule is found in pipefish of the genus Syngnathus, but not in seahorses of the genus Hippocampus. His results suggest that polygamy in pipefish allows fecundity selection to favour large size at low temperatures, compensating for increases in brooding time.
温度与体型地理变异之间的负相关关系,即伯格曼法则,是研究最为深入的生态地理法则之一,但其背后的模式和过程仍存在争议。伯格曼最初的观察是关于恒温动物的体型渐变群,但在过去50年里,人们越来越认识到伯格曼法则及其相反情况在许多变温动物类群中都存在。威尔逊(2009年)在本期《分子生态学》上对海龙科鱼类进行的一项新研究,揭示了一些有趣的替代机制,这些机制可能解释了不同类群中体型渐变群方向的变异。威尔逊表明,伯格曼法则在海龙属的管口鱼中存在,但在海马属的海马中不存在。他的研究结果表明,管口鱼的一夫多妻制使得繁殖力选择有利于低温下的大体型,从而补偿育雏时间的增加。