Durst Paul A P, Roth V Louise
Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708-0338, USA
Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708-0338, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2015 Jul 7;282(1810). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2015.0239.
The tendency for island populations of mammalian taxa to diverge in body size from their mainland counterparts consistently in particular directions is both impressive for its regularity and, especially among rodents, troublesome for its exceptions. However, previous studies have largely ignored mainland body size variation, treating size differences of any magnitude as equally noteworthy. Here, we use distributions of mainland population body sizes to identify island populations as 'extremely' big or small, and we compare traits of extreme populations and their islands with those of island populations more typical in body size. We find that although insular rodents vary in the directions of body size change, 'extreme' populations tend towards gigantism. With classification tree methods, we develop a predictive model, which points to resource limitations as major drivers in the few cases of insular dwarfism. Highly successful in classifying our dataset, our model also successfully predicts change in untested cases.
哺乳动物类群的岛屿种群在体型上与大陆同类种群持续朝着特定方向分化的趋势,其规律性令人印象深刻,而在啮齿动物中,其例外情况尤其麻烦。然而,以往的研究大多忽略了大陆种群体型的变化,将任何程度的体型差异都视为同等重要。在这里,我们利用大陆种群体型分布来确定岛屿种群是“极其”大还是小,并将极端种群及其岛屿的特征与体型更典型的岛屿种群的特征进行比较。我们发现,虽然岛屿啮齿动物在体型变化方向上有所不同,但“极端”种群往往趋于巨型化。通过分类树方法,我们开发了一个预测模型,该模型指出资源限制是少数岛屿侏儒症案例中的主要驱动因素。我们的模型在对数据集进行分类时非常成功,也成功预测了未测试案例中的变化。