Evolutionary Ecology Laboratories, Department of Biology, Brigham Young University Provo, Utah, 84602.
Evolutionary Ecology Laboratories, Department of Biology, Brigham Young University Provo, Utah, 84602 ; Monte L. Bean Life Science Museum, Brigham Young University Provo, Utah, 84602.
Ecol Evol. 2014 Nov;4(22):4361-9. doi: 10.1002/ece3.1304. Epub 2014 Oct 27.
The effect of divergent natural selection on the evolution of behavioral traits has long been a focus of behavioral ecologists. Predation, due to its ubiquity in nature and strength as a selective agent, has been considered an important environmental driver of behavior. Predation is often confounded with other environmental factors that could also play a role in behavioral evolution. For example, environments that contain predators are often more ecologically complex and "risky" (i.e., exposed and dangerous). Previous work shows that individuals from risky environments are often more bold, active, and explorative than those from low-risk environments. To date, most comparative studies of environmentally driven behavioral divergence are limited to comparisons among populations within species that occur in divergent selective environments but neglect comparisons between species following speciation. This limits our understanding of how behavior evolves post-speciation. The Central American live-bearing fish genus Brachyrhaphis provides an ideal system for examining the relationship between selective environments and behavior, within and between species. Here, we test for differences in boldness between sister species B. roseni and B. terrabensis that occur in streams with and without piscivorous predators, respectively. We found that species do differ in boldness, with species that occur with predators being bolder than those that do not. Within each species, we found that sexes differed in boldness, with males being bolder than females. We also tested for a relationship between size (a surrogate for metabolic rate) and boldness, but found no size effects. Therefore, sex, not size, affects boldness. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that complex and risky environments favor individuals with more bold behavioral traits, but they are not consistent with the hypothesis that size (and therefore metabolic rate) drives divergence in boldness. Finally, our results provide evidence that behavioral trait divergence continues even after speciation is complete.
自然选择对行为特征进化的影响一直是行为生态学家关注的焦点。捕食作用由于其在自然界中的普遍性和作为选择因素的强大性,被认为是行为进化的重要环境驱动因素。捕食作用通常与其他可能在行为进化中起作用的环境因素混淆。例如,包含捕食者的环境通常更具生态复杂性和“风险”(即暴露和危险)。以前的研究表明,来自高风险环境的个体通常比来自低风险环境的个体更勇敢、活跃和探索性。迄今为止,大多数关于环境驱动的行为趋异的比较研究仅限于在不同选择环境中发生的物种内的种群之间进行比较,而忽略了物种形成后物种之间的比较。这限制了我们对行为在物种形成后如何进化的理解。中美洲产仔鱼属 Brachyrhaphis 为研究选择环境与行为之间的关系提供了一个理想的系统,包括物种内和物种间。在这里,我们测试了分别生活在有和没有食鱼性捕食者的溪流中的姐妹种 B. roseni 和 B. terrabensis 之间的大胆差异。我们发现物种在大胆程度上确实存在差异,与存在捕食者的物种相比,没有捕食者的物种更加大胆。在每个物种中,我们发现性别在大胆程度上存在差异,雄性比雌性更加大胆。我们还测试了大小(代谢率的替代物)与大胆之间的关系,但没有发现大小的影响。因此,性别而不是大小影响大胆程度。这些结果与复杂和危险的环境有利于具有更多大胆行为特征的个体的假设一致,但与大小(因此代谢率)驱动大胆程度分歧的假设不一致。最后,我们的研究结果表明,即使在物种形成完成后,行为特征的趋异仍在继续。