Meiri Shai, Kadison Amy E, Novosolov Maria, Pafilis Panayiotis, Foufopoulos Johannes, Itescu Yuval, Raia Pasquale, Pincheira-Donoso Daniel
Department of Zoology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 6997801, Israel.
Section of Zoology and Marine Biology, Department of Biology, University of Athens, Panepistimioupolis, Ilissia, Athens, 157-84, Greece.
J Anim Ecol. 2014 Nov;83(6):1302-12. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12248. Epub 2014 Jun 16.
Sexual size dimorphism (SSD) can allow males and females of the same species to specialize on different sized food items and therefore minimize intraspecific competition. Interspecific competition, however, is thought to limit sexual dimorphism, as larger competitors in the community will prevent the larger sex from evolving larger size, and smaller species may prevent the smaller sex from becoming even smaller. We tested this prediction using data on the sexual size dimorphism of lizards, and mammalian carnivores, on islands world-wide. Because insular communities are depauperate, and guilds are species-poor, it is often assumed that enhanced sexual size dimorphism is common on islands. The intensity of interspecific competition, hindering enhanced dimorphism, is thought to increase with competitor richness. We tested whether intraspecific sexual size dimorphism of mammalian carnivores and lizards decreases with increasing island species richness. We further computed the average sexual dimorphism of species on islands and tested whether species-rich islands are inhabited by relatively monomorphic species. Within families and guilds across carnivores and lizards, and with both intraspecific and interspecific approaches, we consistently failed to find support for the notion that species-poor islands harbour more sexually dimorphic individuals or species. We conclude that either interspecific competition does not affect the sexual size dimorphism of insular lizards and carnivores (i.e. character displacement and species sorting are rare in these taxa), or that the number of species in an assemblage or guild is a poor proxy for the intensity of interspecific competition in insular assemblages.
两性体型差异(SSD)可使同一物种的雄性和雌性专注于不同大小的食物,从而将种内竞争降至最低。然而,种间竞争被认为会限制两性体型差异,因为群落中较大的竞争者会阻止较大性别的个体进化出更大的体型,而较小的物种可能会阻止较小性别的个体变得更小。我们利用全球岛屿上蜥蜴和哺乳类食肉动物的两性体型差异数据对这一预测进行了检验。由于岛屿群落物种匮乏,功能群物种较少,人们通常认为岛屿上两性体型差异增大的情况很常见。种间竞争的强度会阻碍两性体型差异增大,且被认为会随着竞争者丰富度的增加而增强。我们检验了哺乳类食肉动物和蜥蜴的种内两性体型差异是否会随着岛屿物种丰富度的增加而减小。我们还计算了岛屿上物种的平均两性体型差异,并检验物种丰富的岛屿是否栖息着相对单一形态的物种。在食肉动物和蜥蜴的科与功能群内部,以及采用种内和种间两种方法,我们始终未能找到证据支持物种贫乏的岛屿上存在更多两性体型差异个体或物种这一观点。我们得出结论,要么种间竞争不会影响岛屿蜥蜴和食肉动物的两性体型差异(即性状替代和物种分选在这些分类群中很少见),要么一个组合或功能群中的物种数量并不能很好地代表岛屿组合中种间竞争的强度。