Ocean Sciences Centre, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1 Marine Lab Road, St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada.
Am Nat. 2011 Apr;177(4):496-509. doi: 10.1086/658902.
Biological invasions are opportunities to gain insight into fundamental evolutionary questions, because reproductive isolation and sudden alterations in selection pressures are likely to lead to rapid evolutionary change. Here I investigate the role played by invasive species in revealing the rate and form of contemporary phenotypic change in wild populations by expanding a database of more than 5,500 rates of phenotypic change from 90 species of plants and animals. Invasive species are frequently used as model organisms and thus contribute disproportionately to available rates of phenotypic change. However, the preponderance of these rates is the consequence of extensive study in a small number of species. I found mixed evidence to support the hypothesis that phenotypic change is associated with time depending on the metric of choice (i.e., darwins or haldanes). Insights from both invasive and native species provide evidence for abrupt phenotypic change and suggest that the environment plays a potentially important role in driving trait change in wild populations, although the environmental influence on the observed trajectories remains unclear. Thus, future work should continue to seek an understanding of the mechanistic underpinnings--both genetic and environmental--of how phenotypic variation allows populations to adapt to rapidly changing global environments.
生物入侵为我们深入了解基本进化问题提供了契机,因为生殖隔离和选择压力的突然改变很可能导致快速的进化变化。在这里,我通过扩展一个包含 5500 多个动植物物种表型变化率的数据库,研究了入侵物种在揭示野生种群当代表型变化的速度和形式方面所起的作用。入侵物种经常被用作模式生物,因此它们对可获得的表型变化率的贡献不成比例。然而,这些比率的绝大多数是由于对少数几种物种进行了广泛的研究。我发现,混合证据支持这样一种假设,即表型变化与时间有关,这取决于所选择的度量标准(即达尔文或霍尔丹)。来自入侵物种和本地物种的信息都为突然的表型变化提供了证据,并表明环境在驱动野生种群的性状变化方面可能起着重要作用,尽管环境对观察到的轨迹的影响仍不清楚。因此,未来的工作应该继续寻求理解表型变异如何使种群适应快速变化的全球环境的遗传和环境机制基础。