Department of Biology, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, United States of America.
Department of Biology, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, United States of America ; Monte L. Bean Life Science Museum, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Feb 26;9(2):e90274. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0090274. eCollection 2014.
Natural selection often results in profound differences in body shape among populations from divergent selective environments. Predation is a well-studied driver of divergence, with predators having a strong effect on the evolution of prey body shape, especially for traits related to escape behavior. Comparative studies, both at the population level and between species, show that the presence or absence of predators can alter prey morphology. Although this pattern is well documented in various species or population pairs, few studies have tested for similar patterns of body shape evolution at multiple stages of divergence within a taxonomic group. Here, we examine morphological divergence associated with predation environment in the livebearing fish genus Brachyrhaphis. We compare differences in body shape between populations of B. rhabdophora from different predation environments to differences in body shape between B. roseni and B. terrabensis (sister species) from predator and predator free habitats, respectively. We found that in each lineage, shape differed between predation environments, consistent with the hypothesis that locomotor function is optimized for either steady swimming (predator free) or escape behavior (predator). Although differences in body shape were greatest between B. roseni and B. terrabensis, we found that much of the total morphological diversification between these species had already been achieved within B. rhabdophora (29% in females and 47% in males). Interestingly, at both levels of divergence we found that early in ontogenetic development, females differed in shape between predation environments; however, as females matured, their body shapes converged on a similar phenotype, likely due to the constraints of pregnancy. Finally, we found that body shape varies with body size in a similar way, regardless of predation environment, in each lineage. Our findings are important because they provide evidence that the same source of selection can drive similar phenotypic divergence independently at multiple divergence levels.
自然选择常常导致来自不同选择环境的种群在体型上产生深刻差异。捕食是一个研究得很好的趋异驱动因素,捕食者对猎物体型的进化有很强的影响,尤其是对与逃避行为相关的特征。比较研究,无论是在种群水平还是在物种之间,都表明捕食者的存在与否可以改变猎物的形态。尽管这种模式在各种物种或种群对中都有很好的记录,但很少有研究在分类群的多个分歧阶段测试类似的体型进化模式。在这里,我们研究了胎生鱼类 Brachyrhaphis 属中与捕食环境相关的形态分歧。我们比较了来自不同捕食环境的 B. rhabdophora 种群之间的体型差异,以及来自无捕食者和有捕食者栖息地的 B. roseni 和 B. terrabensis(姐妹种)之间的体型差异。我们发现,在每个谱系中,形状都因捕食环境而异,这与运动功能分别为稳定游泳(无捕食者)或逃避行为(有捕食者)而优化的假设一致。尽管 B. roseni 和 B. terrabensis 之间的体型差异最大,但我们发现,这些物种之间的大部分形态多样化已经在 B. rhabdophora 中实现(雌性为 29%,雄性为 47%)。有趣的是,在两个分歧水平上,我们发现,在发育早期,雌性在捕食环境之间的形状就有所不同;然而,随着雌性的成熟,它们的体型趋于相似的表型,这可能是由于怀孕的限制。最后,我们发现,无论捕食环境如何,在每个谱系中,体型都以相似的方式随体型大小而变化。我们的发现很重要,因为它们提供了证据表明,同一来源的选择可以在多个分歧水平上独立地驱动类似的表型分歧。