Evolution and Ecology Research Centre, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Kensington, New South Wales 2052, Australia.
Evolution. 2011 Sep;65(9):2572-91. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2011.01319.x. Epub 2011 May 3.
We tested hypotheses on how animals should respond to heterospecifics encountered in the environment. Hypotheses were formulated from models parameterized to emphasize four factors that are expected to influence species discrimination: mating and territorial interactions; sex differences in resource value; environments in which heterospecifics were common or rare; and the type of identity cues available for species recognition. We also considered the role of phylogeny on contemporary responses to heterospecifics. We tested the extent these factors explained variation among taxa in species discrimination using a meta-analysis of three decades of species recognition research. A surprising outcome was the absence of a general predictor of when species discrimination would most likely occur. Instead, species discrimination is dictated by the benefits and costs of responding to a conspecific or heterospecific that are governed by the specific circumstances of a given species. The phylogeny of species recognition provided another unexpected finding: the evolutionary relationships among species predicted whether courting males within species-but not females-would discriminate against heterospecifcs. This implies that species recognition has evolved quite differently in the sexes. Finally, we identify common pitfalls in experimental design that seem to have affected some studies (e.g., poor statistical power) and provide recommendations for future research.
我们检验了动物在环境中遇到同种和异种时应该如何做出反应的假设。这些假设是基于强调四个预期会影响物种辨别因素的模型制定的:交配和领地相互作用;资源价值的性别差异;同种和异种常见或罕见的环境;以及可用于物种识别的身份线索的类型。我们还考虑了种系发生对当代对异种反应的作用。我们通过对三十年来物种识别研究的荟萃分析,检验了这些因素在多大程度上解释了分类群在物种辨别方面的差异。一个令人惊讶的结果是,没有一个普遍的预测因素可以说明物种辨别最有可能发生的情况。相反,物种辨别取决于对同种或异种的反应的收益和成本,而这又由特定物种的具体情况决定。物种识别的种系发生提供了另一个意外的发现:物种之间的进化关系预测了同种求偶雄性——而不是雌性——是否会歧视异种。这意味着物种识别在性别上已经进化得非常不同。最后,我们确定了一些常见的实验设计陷阱,这些陷阱似乎影响了一些研究(例如,统计能力差),并为未来的研究提供了建议。