Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, 80309, USA; BioFrontiers Institute, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, 80309, USA.
Ecol Lett. 2014 Feb;17(2):211-20. doi: 10.1111/ele.12221. Epub 2013 Dec 5.
Horses (family Equidae) are a classic example of adaptive radiation, exhibiting a nearly 60-fold increase in maximum body mass and a peak taxonomic diversity of nearly 100 species across four continents. Such patterns are commonly attributed to niche competition, in which increased taxonomic diversity drives increased size disparity. However, neutral processes, such as macroevolutionary 'diffusion', can produce similar increases in disparity without increased diversity. Using a comprehensive database of Equidae species size estimates and a common mathematical framework, we measure the contributions of diversity-driven and diffusion-driven mechanisms for increased disparity during the Equidae radiation. We find that more than 90% of changes in size disparity are attributable to diffusion alone. These results clarify the role of species competition in body size evolution, indicate that morphological disparity and species diversity may be only weakly coupled in general, and demonstrate that large species may evolve from neutral macroevolutionary diffusion processes alone.
马(马科)是适应性辐射的经典范例,其最大体型的增长了近 60 倍,在四大洲的分类多样性达到了近 100 种的峰值。这种模式通常归因于生态位竞争,其中分类多样性的增加导致体型差异的增加。然而,中性过程,如宏观进化“扩散”,可以在没有增加多样性的情况下产生类似的差异增加。利用马科物种体型估计的综合数据库和通用数学框架,我们衡量了在马科辐射过程中,多样性驱动和扩散驱动机制对差异增加的贡献。我们发现,超过 90%的体型差异变化归因于扩散本身。这些结果阐明了物种竞争在体型进化中的作用,表明形态差异和物种多样性一般来说可能只有弱耦合,并证明大型物种可能仅通过中性宏观进化扩散过程进化而来。