Krug Patrick J, Vendetti Jann E, Ellingson Ryan A, Trowbridge Cynthia D, Hirano Yayoi M, Trathen Danielle Y, Rodriguez Albert K, Swennen Cornelis, Wilson Nerida G, Valdés Ángel A
Department of Biological Sciences, California State University, Los Angeles, CA 90032-8201, USA;
Oregon Institute of Marine Biology, University of Oregon, PO Box 5389, Charleston, OR 97420, USA;
Syst Biol. 2015 Nov;64(6):983-99. doi: 10.1093/sysbio/syv046. Epub 2015 Jul 10.
For 40 years, paleontological studies of marine gastropods have suggested that species selection favors lineages with short-lived (lecithotrophic) larvae, which are less dispersive than long-lived (planktotrophic) larvae. Although lecithotrophs appeared to speciate more often and accumulate over time in some groups, lecithotrophy also increased extinction rates, and tests for state-dependent diversification were never performed. Molecular phylogenies of diverse groups instead suggested lecithotrophs accumulate without diversifying due to frequent, unidirectional character change. Although lecithotrophy has repeatedly originated in most phyla, no adult trait has been correlated with shifts in larval type. Thus, both the evolutionary origins of lecithotrophy and its consequences for patterns of species richness remain poorly understood. Here, we test hypothesized links between development mode and evolutionary rates using likelihood-based methods and a phylogeny of 202 species of gastropod molluscs in Sacoglossa, a clade of herbivorous sea slugs. Evolutionary quantitative genetics modeling and stochastic character mapping supported 27 origins of lecithotrophy. Tests for correlated evolution revealed lecithotrophy evolved more often in lineages investing in extra-embryonic yolk, the first adult trait associated with shifts in development mode across a group. However, contrary to predictions from paleontological studies, species selection actually favored planktotrophy; most extant lecithotrophs originated through recent character change, and did not subsequently diversify. Increased offspring provisioning in planktotrophs thus favored shifts to short-lived larvae, which led to short-lived lineages over macroevolutionary time scales. These findings challenge long-standing assumptions about the effects of alternative life histories in the sea. Species selection can explain the long-term persistence of planktotrophy, the ancestral state in most clades, despite frequent transitions to lecithotrophy.
四十年来,对海洋腹足类动物的古生物学研究表明,物种选择倾向于具有短命(卵黄营养型)幼虫的谱系,这种幼虫的扩散能力不如长寿(浮游营养型)幼虫。尽管在某些类群中,卵黄营养型幼虫似乎更频繁地形成新物种并随时间积累,但卵黄营养型也增加了灭绝率,且从未进行过状态依赖多样化的测试。相反,不同类群的分子系统发育表明,由于频繁的单向性状变化,卵黄营养型幼虫在积累的同时并没有多样化。尽管卵黄营养型在大多数门类中反复出现,但没有成体性状与幼虫类型的转变相关。因此,卵黄营养型的进化起源及其对物种丰富度模式的影响仍然知之甚少。在这里,我们使用基于似然性的方法以及食草海蛞蝓分支Sacoglossa中202种腹足纲软体动物的系统发育,来检验发育模式与进化速率之间的假设联系。进化数量遗传学建模和随机性状映射支持了27次卵黄营养型的起源。相关进化测试表明,卵黄营养型在投资于胚外卵黄的谱系中进化得更为频繁,这是首个与一个类群发育模式转变相关的成体性状。然而,与古生物学研究的预测相反,物种选择实际上更倾向于浮游营养型;大多数现存的卵黄营养型是通过最近的性状变化起源的,随后并没有多样化。因此,浮游营养型中增加的后代供应有利于向短命幼虫的转变,这在宏观进化时间尺度上导致了短命谱系的出现。这些发现挑战了关于海洋中替代生活史影响的长期假设。物种选择可以解释浮游营养型(大多数类群的祖先状态)的长期存在,尽管它频繁地向卵黄营养型转变。