Department of Biology and Grice Marine Laboratory, College of Charleston, Charleston, SC 29412, USA.
Oecologia. 2013 Aug;172(4):1071-83. doi: 10.1007/s00442-012-2559-6. Epub 2012 Dec 20.
The ecological impacts of generalist herbivores depend on feeding preferences, which can vary across and within herbivore species. Among mesoherbivores, geographic variation in host use can occur because host plants have a more restricted geographic distribution than does the herbivore, or there is local evolution in host preference, or both. We tested the role of local evolution using the marine amphipod Ampithoe longimana by rearing multiple amphipod populations from three regions (subtropical Florida, warm-temperate North Carolina and cold-temperate New England) and assaying their feeding preferences toward ten seaweeds that occur in some but not all regions. Six of the ten seaweeds produce anti-herbivore secondary metabolites, and we detected geographic variation in feeding preference toward five (Dictyota menstrualis, Dictyota ciliolata, Fucus distichus, Chondrus crispus and Padina gymnospora, but not Caulerpa sertularioides). Amphipod populations that co-occur with a chemically-rich seaweed tended to have stronger feeding preferences for that seaweed, relative to populations that do not co-occur with the seaweed. A direct test indicated that geographic variation in feeding preference toward one seaweed (D. ciliolata) is mediated by feeding tolerance for lipophilic secondary metabolites. Among the four seaweeds that produce no known secondary metabolites (Acanthophora, Ectocarpus, Gracilaria and Hincksia/Feldmannia spp.), we detected no geographic variation in feeding preference. Thus, populations are more likely to evolve greater feeding preferences for local hosts when those hosts produce secondary metabolites. Microevolution of feeding behaviors of generalist marine consumers likely depends on the availability and identity of local hosts and the strength of their chemical defenses.
广食性食草动物的生态影响取决于它们的取食偏好,而这些偏好可能在食草动物物种内和物种间有所不同。在中型食草动物中,由于宿主植物的地理分布比食草动物更有限,或者由于宿主偏好发生了局部进化,或者两者兼而有之,因此可能会出现宿主利用的地理差异。我们通过饲养来自三个地区(亚热带佛罗里达州、暖温带北卡罗来纳州和冷温带新英格兰州)的多个桡足类种群,并对这十个在某些地区而不是所有地区都存在的海藻进行取食偏好分析,来检验局部进化的作用。这十种海藻中有六种产生抗食草动物的次生代谢物,我们检测到对其中五种海藻(Dictyota menstrualis、Dictyota ciliolata、Fucus distichus、Chondrus crispus 和 Padina gymnospora,但不包括 Caulerpa sertularioides)的取食偏好存在地理差异。与那些不与富含化学物质的海藻共存的种群相比,与富含化学物质的海藻共存的桡足类种群对该海藻的取食偏好更强。直接测试表明,对一种海藻(D. ciliolata)取食偏好的地理差异是由对脂溶性次生代谢物的取食耐受性介导的。在四种不产生已知次生代谢物的海藻(Acanthophora、Ectocarpus、Gracilaria 和 Hincksia/Feldmannia spp.)中,我们没有检测到取食偏好的地理差异。因此,当这些宿主产生次生代谢物时,种群更有可能进化出对当地宿主更强的取食偏好。广食性海洋消费者取食行为的微观进化很可能取决于当地宿主的可用性和身份,以及它们化学防御的强度。