Metapopulation Research Group, Department of Biosciences, University of Helsinki, PO Box 65, Helsinki 00014, Finland.
Biol Lett. 2013 Feb 27;9(2):20130020. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2013.0020. Print 2013 Apr 23.
On small isolated islands, natural selection is expected to reduce the dispersal capacity of organisms, as short distances do not require a high rate of dispersal, which might lead to accidental emigration from the population. In addition, individuals foregoing the high cost of maintaining flight capacity may instead allocate resources to other functions. However, in butterflies and many other insects, flight is necessary not only for dispersal but also for most other activities. A weakly flying individual would probably do worse and have an elevated rather than reduced probability of accidental emigration. Here, we report results consistent with the hypothesis that a butterfly population on an isolated island, instead of having lost its flight capacity, has evolved better grip to resist the force of wind and to avoid being blown off the island. Our study suggests that local adaptation has occurred in this population in spite of its very small size (Ne ∼ 100), complete isolation, low genetic variation and high genetic load.
在小型孤立岛屿上,自然选择预计会降低生物体的扩散能力,因为短距离不需要高的扩散率,这可能导致种群的偶然移民。此外,放弃维持飞行能力的高成本的个体可能会将资源分配到其他功能上。然而,在蝴蝶和许多其他昆虫中,飞行不仅是扩散所必需的,也是大多数其他活动所必需的。一个飞行能力较弱的个体可能表现得更差,并且意外移民的可能性更高而不是更低。在这里,我们报告的结果与假设一致,即在一个孤立的岛屿上的蝴蝶种群,并没有失去飞行能力,而是进化出了更好的抓地力来抵抗风力,避免被风吹离岛屿。我们的研究表明,尽管这个种群的规模非常小(Ne≈100)、完全隔离、遗传变异低和遗传负荷高,但仍发生了局部适应。