Department of Zoology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2005 Nov;8(11):1211-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2005.00825.x.
Body sizes of insular mammals often differ strikingly from those of their mainland conspecifics. Small islands have reduced numbers of competitor and predator species, and more limited resources. Such reductions are believed to select for predictable changes in body sizes, with large mammals growing progressively smaller as island area decreases, while small ones grow progressively larger. Medium-sized mammals are thought to be largest on intermediate-sized islands. Increased isolation is seen as promoting insular gigantism. We searched for such patterns using a large database of insular carnivore specimens. Neither small nor large carnivores show a consistent area/body size relationship. Medium-sized carnivores are no more likely to attain large size on medium-sized islands then they are to be small there. We found no consistent patterns of body size variation in relation to isolation.
岛屿哺乳动物的体型通常与它们在大陆上的同种动物有显著差异。小岛的竞争和捕食物种数量减少,资源也更有限。据认为,这种减少会选择出可预测的体型变化,随着岛屿面积的减少,大型哺乳动物逐渐变小,而小型哺乳动物则逐渐变大。中型哺乳动物被认为在中等大小的岛屿上体型最大。隔离的增加被认为促进了岛屿巨型化。我们使用一个大型岛屿食肉动物标本数据库来寻找这些模式。小型或大型食肉动物都没有表现出一致的面积/体型关系。中型食肉动物在中型岛屿上达到大型体型的可能性并不比在那里成为小型体型的可能性更大。我们没有发现体型变化与隔离有关的一致模式。