Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.
J Evol Biol. 2012 Oct;25(10):1937-1946. doi: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2012.02583.x. Epub 2012 Aug 10.
Responses to novel threats (e.g. invasive species) can involve genetic changes or plastic shifts in phenotype. There is controversy over the relative importance of these processes for species survival of such perturbations, but we are realizing they are not mutually exclusive. Native eastern fence lizards (Sceloporus undulatus) have adapted to top-down predation pressure imposed by the invasive red imported fire ant (Solenopsis invicta) via changes in adult (but not juvenile) lizard antipredator behaviour. Here, we examine the largely ignored, but potentially equally important, bottom-up effect of fire ants as toxic prey for lizards. We test how fire ant consumption (or avoidance) is affected by lifetime (via plasticity) and evolutionary (via natural selection) exposure to fire ants by comparing field-caught and laboratory-reared lizards, respectively, from fire ant-invaded and uninvaded populations. More naive juveniles from invaded populations ate fire ants than did adults, reflecting a natural ontogenetic dietary shift away from ants. Laboratory-reared lizards from the invaded site were less likely to eat fire ants than were those from the uninvaded site, suggesting a potential evolutionary shift in feeding behaviour. Lifetime and evolutionary exposure interacted across ontogeny, however, and field-caught lizards from the invaded site exhibited opposite ontogenetic trends; adults were more likely to eat fire ants than were juveniles. Our results suggest that plastic and evolutionary processes may both play important roles in permitting species survival of novel threats. We further reveal how complex interactions can shape adaptive responses to multimodal impacts imposed by invaders: in our system, fire ants impose stronger bottom-up selection than top-down selection, with each selection regime changing differently across lizard ontogeny.
对新出现的威胁(例如入侵物种)的反应可能涉及遗传变化或表型的可塑性变化。对于这些干扰下物种生存的相对重要性,存在争议,但我们意识到它们并非相互排斥。原生东部围栏蜥蜴(Sceloporus undulatus)通过改变成年(而非幼年)蜥蜴的防御行为,适应了入侵红火蚁(Solenopsis invicta)施加的自上而下的捕食压力。在这里,我们研究了火蚁作为蜥蜴的有毒猎物的作用,这一作用在很大程度上被忽视了,但可能同样重要。我们通过比较分别来自红火蚁入侵和未入侵种群的野外捕获和实验室饲养的蜥蜴,分别测试了火蚁消耗(或回避)如何受到终生(通过可塑性)和进化(通过自然选择)暴露于火蚁的影响。来自入侵种群的更为幼稚的幼体比成年蜥蜴更倾向于吃火蚁,反映出一种从蚂蚁自然进化的饮食转移。来自入侵地点的实验室饲养的蜥蜴比来自未入侵地点的蜥蜴更不可能吃火蚁,这表明它们的进食行为可能发生了潜在的进化变化。然而,终生和进化暴露在整个发育过程中相互作用,来自入侵地点的野外捕获的蜥蜴则表现出相反的发育趋势;成年蜥蜴比幼体蜥蜴更有可能吃火蚁。我们的研究结果表明,可塑性和进化过程都可能在允许物种对新出现的威胁进行生存中发挥重要作用。我们进一步揭示了复杂的相互作用如何塑造对入侵物种施加的多模态影响的适应性反应:在我们的系统中,火蚁比自上而下的选择施加更强的底层选择,而每个选择机制在蜥蜴的整个发育过程中都有不同的变化。