Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540, USA.
J Evol Biol. 2013 Sep;26(9):1988-98. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12202. Epub 2013 Aug 14.
A central goal in evolutionary ecology is to characterize and identify selection patterns on the optimal phenotype in different environments. Physiological traits, such as hormonal responses, provide important mechanisms by which individuals can adapt to fluctuating environmental conditions. It is therefore expected that selection shapes hormonal traits, but the strength and the direction of selection on plastic hormonal signals are still under investigation. Here, we determined whether, and in which way, selection is acting on the hormones corticosterone and prolactin by characterizing endocrine phenotypes and their relationship with fitness in free-living great tits, Parus major. We quantified variation in circulating concentrations of baseline and stress-induced corticosterone and in prolactin during the prebreeding (March) and the breeding season (May) for two consecutive years, and correlated these with reproductive success (yearly fledgling number) and overwinter survival in female and male individuals. In both years, individuals with high baseline corticosterone concentrations in March had the highest yearly fledgling numbers; while in May, individuals with low baseline corticosterone had the highest yearly reproductive success. Likewise, individuals that displayed strong seasonal plasticity in baseline corticosterone concentrations (high in March and low in May) had the highest reproductive success in each year. Prolactin concentrations were not related to reproductive success, but were positively correlated to the proximity to lay. Between-year plasticity in stress-induced corticosterone concentrations of males was related to yearly variation in food abundance, but not to overall reproductive success. These findings suggest that seasonally alternating directional selection is operating on baseline corticosterone concentrations in both sexes. The observed between-year consistency in selection patterns indicates that a one-time hormone sample in a given season can allow the prediction of individual fitness.
进化生态学的一个核心目标是描述和识别在不同环境中最优表型的选择模式。生理特征,如激素反应,为个体适应波动的环境条件提供了重要机制。因此,可以预期选择会塑造激素特征,但关于可塑性激素信号的选择强度和方向仍在研究中。在这里,我们通过描述内分泌表型及其与自由生活大山雀(Parus major)适应力的关系,确定了选择是否以及以何种方式作用于激素皮质酮和催乳素。我们连续两年量化了基础和应激诱导的皮质酮和催乳素在繁殖前(3 月)和繁殖季节(5 月)期间的循环浓度变化,并将其与繁殖成功率(每年育雏数)和雌性和雄性个体的越冬存活率相关联。在这两年中,3 月份基础皮质酮浓度高的个体每年的育雏数最高;而在 5 月份,基础皮质酮浓度低的个体的繁殖成功率最高。同样,基础皮质酮浓度具有强烈季节性变化的个体(3 月份高,5 月份低)在每年都有最高的繁殖成功率。催乳素浓度与繁殖成功率无关,但与产卵的接近度呈正相关。雄性个体应激诱导的皮质酮浓度的跨年度可塑性与食物丰度的年度变化有关,但与整体繁殖成功率无关。这些发现表明,季节性交替的定向选择作用于两性的基础皮质酮浓度。选择模式的跨年度一致性表明,在给定季节进行一次激素样本可以预测个体适应力。