The Depts of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Mathematics, Institute for Environmental Modeling, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996-1300,USA.
Trends Ecol Evol. 1997 Aug;12(8):307-12. doi: 10.1016/S0169-5347(97)01098-7.
Sewall Wright's powerful metaphor of rugged adaptive landscapes has formed the basis for discussing evolution and speciation for more than 60 years. However, this metaphor, with its emphasis on adaptive peaks and valleys, is to a large degree a reflection of our three-dimensional experience. Both genotypes and phenotypes of biological organisms differ in numerous characteristics, and, thus, the dimension of 'real' adaptive landscapes is much larger than three. Properties of multidimensional adaptive landscapes are very different from those of low dimension. Consequently, something that is seen as a theoretical challenge in a low-dimensional case might be a trivial problem in a multidimensional context and vice versa. In particular, the problem of how a population crosses an adaptive valley on its way from one adaptive peak to another, which Wright attempted to solve with his shifting balance theory, may be non-existent. A new framework is emerging for deepening our understanding of evolution and speciation, which provides a plausible multidimensional alternative to the conventional view of rugged adaptive landscapes.
塞沃尔·赖特( Sewall Wright )强有力的适应地形崎岖隐喻已经形成了讨论进化和物种形成 60 多年的基础。然而,这种强调适应峰谷的隐喻在很大程度上反映了我们的三维体验。生物有机体的基因型和表型在许多特征上都有所不同,因此,“真正的”适应地形的维度要比三维大得多。多维适应地形的性质与低维的性质非常不同。因此,在低维情况下被视为理论挑战的问题,在多维情况下可能是微不足道的问题,反之亦然。特别是赖特( Wright )试图用其迁移平衡理论解决的种群如何在从一个适应峰到另一个适应峰的过程中穿越适应低谷的问题,可能并不存在。一个新的框架正在出现,以加深我们对进化和物种形成的理解,它为传统的崎岖适应地形提供了一个合理的多维替代方案。