Anthropological Institute and Museum, University of Zurich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, 8057 Zurich, Switzerland.
Am Nat. 2010 Dec;176(6):758-67. doi: 10.1086/657045.
Seasonal changes in energy supply impose energetic constraints that affect many physiological and behavioral characteristics of organisms. As brains are costly, we predict brain size to be relatively small in species that experience a higher degree of seasonality (expensive brain framework). Alternatively, it has been argued that larger brains give animals the behavioral flexibility to buffer the effects of habitat seasonality (cognitive buffer hypothesis). Here, we test these two hypotheses in a comparative study on strepsirrhine primates (African lorises and Malagasy lemurs) that experience widely varying degrees of seasonality. We found that experienced seasonality is negatively correlated with relative brain size in both groups, controlling for the effect of phylogenetic relationships and possible confounding variables such as the extent of folivory. However, relatively larger-brained lemur species tend to experience less variation in their dietary intake than indicated by the seasonality of their habitat. In conclusion, we found clear support for the hypothesis that seasonality restricts brain size in strepsirrhines as predicted by the expensive brain framework and weak support for the cognitive buffer hypothesis in lemurs.
季节变化会对生物的许多生理和行为特征造成能量限制,而这些限制与能量供应有关。由于大脑是昂贵的组织,因此我们预测,在那些经历更高程度季节性变化的物种中,大脑的相对大小会比较小(昂贵的大脑框架假说)。相反,有人认为更大的大脑赋予了动物行为上的灵活性,使其能够缓冲栖息地季节性变化的影响(认知缓冲假说)。在这里,我们通过对经历着广泛变化的季节性的食虫目灵长类动物(非洲懒猴和马达加斯加狐猴)进行比较研究,来检验这两个假说。我们发现,在控制了系统发育关系的影响和可能的混杂变量(如食叶量)后,经验季节性与两个群体的相对大脑大小呈负相关。然而,相对大脑较大的狐猴物种,其饮食摄入的变化幅度比其栖息地季节性变化所表明的要小。总之,我们发现有明确的证据支持季节性限制食虫目灵长类动物大脑大小的假说,这与昂贵的大脑框架假说的预测一致,而对狐猴的认知缓冲假说的支持则较弱。