Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Guyot Hall 303, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08540.
Integr Comp Biol. 2003 Jul;43(3):376-86. doi: 10.1093/icb/43.3.376.
Complex organismal traits such as body size are influenced by innumerable selective pressures, making the prediction of evolutionary trajectories for those traits difficult. A potentially powerful way to predict fitness in natural systems is to study the composite response of individuals in terms of performance measures, such as foraging or reproductive performance. Once key performance measures are identified in this top-down approach, we can determine the underlying physiological mechanisms and gain predictive power over long-term evolutionary processes. Here we use marine iguanas as a model system where body size differs by more than one order of magnitude between island populations. We identified foraging efficiency as the main performance measure that constrains body size. Mechanistically, foraging performance is determined by food pasture height and the thermal environment, influencing intake and digestion. Stress hormones may be a flexible way of influencing an individual's response to low-food situations that may be caused by high population density, famines, or anthropogenic disturbances like oil spills. Reproductive performance, on the other hand, increases with body size and is mediated by higher survival of larger hatchlings from larger females and increased mating success of larger males. Reproductive performance of males may be adjusted via plastic hormonal feedback mechanisms that allow individuals to assess their social rank annually within the current population size structure. When integrated, these data suggest that reproductive performance favors increased body size (influenced by reproductive hormones), with an overall limit imposed by foraging performance (influenced by stress hormones). Based on our mechanistic understanding of individual performances we predicted an evolutionary increase in maximum body size caused by global warming trends. We support this prediction using specimens collected during 1905. We also show in a common-garden experiment that body size may have a genetic component in iguanids. This 'performance paradigm' allows predictions about adaptive evolution in natural populations.
复杂的生物特征,如体型,受到无数选择压力的影响,使得预测这些特征的进化轨迹变得困难。一种预测自然系统中适应性的潜在有力方法是研究个体在表现度量方面的综合反应,例如觅食或生殖表现。一旦在这种自上而下的方法中确定了关键的表现度量,我们就可以确定潜在的生理机制,并对长期进化过程获得预测能力。在这里,我们使用海鬣蜥作为一个模型系统,其体型在岛屿种群之间相差一个数量级以上。我们确定觅食效率是限制体型的主要表现度量。从机制上讲,觅食表现由食物牧场高度和热环境决定,影响摄入和消化。应激激素可能是一种灵活的方式,可以影响个体对低食物情况的反应,这种情况可能是由高人口密度、饥荒或人为干扰(如石油泄漏)引起的。另一方面,生殖性能随体型的增加而增加,受较大雌蜥的较大幼蜥存活率和较大雄蜥交配成功率的影响。雄性的生殖性能可能通过允许个体每年根据当前人口规模结构评估其社会等级的塑料激素反馈机制来进行调整。综合来看,这些数据表明,生殖性能有利于体型的增加(受生殖激素的影响),而觅食性能(受应激激素的影响)则构成了总体限制。基于我们对个体表现的机制理解,我们预测由于全球变暖趋势,最大体型会发生进化性增加。我们使用 1905 年收集的标本支持了这一预测。我们还在一个共同花园实验中表明,体型在鬣蜥类中可能具有遗传成分。这种“表现范式”允许对自然种群中的适应性进化进行预测。