Sullam Karen E, Dalton Christopher M, Russell Jacob A, Kilham Susan S, El-Sabaawi Rana, German Donovan P, Flecker Alexander S
Department of Biodiversity, Earth and Environmental Science, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, US,
Oecologia. 2015 Jan;177(1):245-57. doi: 10.1007/s00442-014-3158-5. Epub 2014 Nov 28.
A trophic niche shift can occur as an adaptive response to environmental change such as altered resource quality, abundance or composition. Alterations in digestive traits such as gut morphology and physiology may enable these niche shifts and affect the persistence of populations and species. Relatively few studies, however, have assessed how niche shifts influence suites of digestive traits through phenotypic plasticity and evolutionary mechanisms, and how these trait changes can subsequently alter the nutrition, fitness and life history of organisms. We investigated how population divergence and plasticity alter the gut physiology of wild Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata), assessing whether variation in digestive traits correspond with enhanced nutrient assimilation under a pronounced dietary shift. We examined gut enzyme activity, and gut size and mass of wild guppies from both high-predation (HP) and low-predation (LP) habitats when reared in the laboratory and fed on high- or low-quality diets designed to reflect their dietary differences previously found in nature. After 10 weeks on the experimental diets, HP guppies maintained shorter and lighter guts than LP guppies on either diet. Guppies also differed in their digestive enzymatic profiles, more often reflecting nutrient balancing so that increased enzyme expression tended to correspond with more deficient nutrients in the diet. LP guppies had increased somatic phosphorus at the end of the experiment, possibly related to the higher alkaline phosphatase activity in their guts. Our results suggest that differences in gut physiology exist among populations of Trinidadian guppies that may reflect local adaptation to their disparate environments.
营养生态位转移可能作为对环境变化的适应性反应而发生,例如资源质量、丰度或组成的改变。消化特征(如肠道形态和生理)的改变可能促成这些生态位转移,并影响种群和物种的存续。然而,相对较少的研究评估了生态位转移如何通过表型可塑性和进化机制影响消化特征组合,以及这些特征变化随后如何改变生物体的营养、适应性和生活史。我们研究了种群分化和可塑性如何改变野生特立尼达孔雀鱼(Poecilia reticulata)的肠道生理,评估在显著的饮食转变下,消化特征的变化是否与营养同化增强相对应。我们检测了在实验室饲养并投喂旨在反映它们先前在自然环境中饮食差异的高质量或低质量食物时,来自高捕食风险(HP)和低捕食风险(LP)栖息地的野生孔雀鱼的肠道酶活性、肠道大小和重量。在实验饮食喂养10周后,无论哪种饮食,HP孔雀鱼的肠道都比LP孔雀鱼的更短、更轻。孔雀鱼的消化酶谱也存在差异,更多地反映了营养平衡,因此酶表达增加往往与饮食中更缺乏的营养相对应。实验结束时,LP孔雀鱼的体磷增加,这可能与其肠道中较高的碱性磷酸酶活性有关。我们的结果表明,特立尼达孔雀鱼种群之间存在肠道生理差异,这可能反映了它们对不同环境的局部适应。