Department of Biological Sciences, The George Washington University, Washington, DC 20052, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2012 Aug;15(8):822-30. doi: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2012.01802.x. Epub 2012 Jun 6.
Adaptive radiations are typically triggered when a lineage encounters a significant range of open niche space (ecological opportunity), stemming from colonisation of new areas, extinction of competitors or key innovations. The most well-known of these is the colonisation of new areas, through either dispersal into new regions or the invasion of novel ecological regimes. One aspect of ecological opportunity that has rarely been studied, however, is the extent to which pre-existent competitors act to limit diversification in newly colonised adaptive zones. Herein, we show that in multiple geographically independent invasions of freshwaters by marine Sea Catfishes (Ariidae), rates of both morphological disparification and lineage diversification are inversely related to the presence and diversity of other freshwater fish lineages. Only in one region (Australia-New Guinea) with an otherwise depauperate freshwater fauna, has an ariid invasion gained any substantial traction. This is true at both regional and community scales, suggesting that competitive constraints may be an important factor regulating adaptive radiation.
适应辐射通常是在谱系遇到大量开放生态位空间(生态机会)时触发的,这源于新区域的殖民、竞争者的灭绝或关键创新。其中最著名的是通过扩散到新区域或入侵新的生态系统来殖民新区域。然而,生态机会的一个方面很少被研究,即先前存在的竞争者在多大程度上限制了新殖民适应性区域的多样化。在这里,我们表明,在海洋猫鱼科(Ariidae)对淡水的多次地理独立入侵中,形态多样化和谱系多样化的速度与其他淡水鱼类谱系的存在和多样性呈反比。只有在一个淡水动物群本来就很贫乏的地区(澳大利亚-新几内亚),才出现了真正意义上的猫鱼入侵。这在区域和群落尺度上都是如此,这表明竞争约束可能是调节适应辐射的一个重要因素。