Departamento de Biología de Organismos y Sistemas, Área de Zoología, Universidad de Oviedo, Oviedo, Spain.
J Evol Biol. 2012 Sep;25(9):1877-87. doi: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2012.02575.x. Epub 2012 Aug 1.
The evolution of reptilian viviparity is favoured, according to the cold-climate hypothesis, at high latitudes or altitudes, where egg retention would entail thermal benefits for embryogenesis because of maternal thermoregulation. According to this hypothesis, and considering that viviparity would have evolved through a gradual increase in the extent of intrauterine egg retention, highland oviparous populations are expected to exhibit more advanced embryo development at oviposition than lowland populations. We tested for possible differences in the level of egg retention, embryo development time and thermal biology of oviparous Zootoca vivipara near the extreme altitudinal limits of the species distribution in the north of Spain (mean altitude for lowland populations, 235 m asl.; for highland populations, 1895 m asl.). Altitude influenced neither temperature of active lizards in the field nor temperature selected by lizards in a laboratory thermal gradient, and pregnant females selected lower temperatures in the thermal gradient than did males and nonpregnant females across altitudinal levels. Eggs from highland populations contained embryos more developed at the time of oviposition (Dufaure and Hubert's stages 33-35) than eggs of highland populations (stages 30-34) and partly because of this difference incubation time was shorter for highland embryos. When analysed for clutches from both altitudinal extremes at the same embryonic stage at oviposition (stage 33), again incubation time was shorter for highland populations, indicating genuine countergradient variation in developmental rate. Our results indicate that temperature is an environmental factor affecting the geographical distribution of different levels of egg retention in Z. vivipara, as predicted by the cold-climate hypothesis on the evolution of viviparity.
根据寒冷气候假说,爬行动物的胎生进化在高纬度或高海拔地区更为有利,因为卵的保留会通过母体体温调节为胚胎发生带来热效益。根据这一假说,并考虑到胎生可能是通过逐渐增加子宫内卵保留程度而进化而来的,与低地种群相比,高地卵生种群在产卵时预计会表现出更先进的胚胎发育。我们在西班牙北部(低地种群的平均海拔为 235 米,高地种群的平均海拔为 1895 米)接近物种分布的极端海拔极限的地方,对胎生 Zootoca vivipara 的卵保留程度、胚胎发育时间和卵生的热生物学进行了测试。海拔既没有影响到野外活动蜥蜴的体温,也没有影响到蜥蜴在实验室热梯度中选择的温度,怀孕的雌性在热梯度中选择的温度比雄性和非怀孕的雌性低,跨越海拔水平。与高地种群的卵(阶段 30-34)相比,高地种群的卵中含有在产卵时发育更成熟的胚胎(Dufaure 和 Hubert 的阶段 33-35),这也是孵化时间缩短的部分原因。当对来自两个海拔极端的卵在同一胚胎阶段(阶段 33)进行分析时,高地种群的孵化时间仍然更短,表明在发育速度上确实存在反梯度变异。我们的研究结果表明,温度是影响 Z. vivipara 不同程度卵保留的地理分布的环境因素,这与胎生进化的寒冷气候假说预测一致。