Husak Jerry F, Lovern Matthew B
Department of Biology, University of St. Thomas, St. Paul, MN 55105, USA; Department of Zoology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078, USA.
Department of Biology, University of St. Thomas, St. Paul, MN 55105, USA; Department of Zoology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078, USA.
Horm Behav. 2014 Apr;65(4):408-15. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2014.03.006. Epub 2014 Mar 21.
Variation in aggression among species can be due to a number of proximate and ultimate factors, leading to patterns of divergent and convergent evolution of behavior among even closely related species. Caribbean Anolis lizards are well known for their convergence in microhabitat use and morphology, but they also display marked convergence in social behavior and patterns of aggression. We studied 18 Anolis species across six ecomorphs on four different Caribbean islands to test four main hypotheses. We hypothesized that species differences in aggression would be due to species differences in circulating testosterone (T), a steroid hormone implicated in numerous studies across vertebrate taxa as a primary determinant of social behavior; more aggressive species were expected to have higher baseline concentrations of T and corticosterone. We further hypothesized that low-T species would increase T and corticosterone levels during a social challenge. Within three of the four island assemblages studied we found differences in T levels among species within an island that differ in aggression, but in the opposite pattern than predicted: more aggressive species had lower baseline T than the least aggressive species. The fourth island, Puerto Rico, showed the pattern of baseline T levels among species we predicted. There were no patterns of corticosterone levels among species or ecomorphs. One of the two species tested increased T in response to a social challenge, but neither species elevated corticosterone. Our results suggest that it is possible for similarities in aggression among closely related species to evolve via different proximate mechanisms.
物种间攻击行为的差异可能归因于许多近因和远因,这导致了即使是亲缘关系密切的物种之间行为的趋异和趋同进化模式。加勒比安乐蜥以其在微生境利用和形态上的趋同而闻名,但它们在社会行为和攻击模式上也表现出明显的趋同。我们研究了来自四个不同加勒比岛屿的六个生态形态组中的18种安乐蜥,以检验四个主要假设。我们假设攻击行为的物种差异将归因于循环睾酮(T)的物种差异,睾酮是一种类固醇激素,在脊椎动物类群的众多研究中被认为是社会行为的主要决定因素;预计更具攻击性的物种会有更高的T和皮质酮基线浓度。我们进一步假设低T物种在社会挑战期间会增加T和皮质酮水平。在所研究的四个岛屿组合中的三个中,我们发现岛屿内不同攻击性的物种之间T水平存在差异,但与预测的模式相反:更具攻击性的物种比最不具攻击性的物种具有更低的基线T。第四个岛屿波多黎各呈现出我们预测的物种间基线T水平模式。物种或生态形态组之间没有皮质酮水平模式。所测试的两个物种中的一个对社会挑战有T增加的反应,但两个物种都没有提高皮质酮水平。我们的结果表明,亲缘关系密切的物种之间攻击行为的相似性有可能通过不同的近因机制进化而来。