Arbuckle Kevin, Speed Michael P
Department of Evolution, Ecology and Behaviour, Institute of Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 7ZB, United Kingdom
Department of Evolution, Ecology and Behaviour, Institute of Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 7ZB, United Kingdom.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Nov 3;112(44):13597-602. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1509811112. Epub 2015 Oct 19.
The "escape-and-radiate" hypothesis predicts that antipredator defenses facilitate adaptive radiations by enabling escape from constraints of predation, diversified habitat use, and subsequently speciation. Animals have evolved diverse strategies to reduce the direct costs of predation, including cryptic coloration and behavior, chemical defenses, mimicry, and advertisement of unprofitability (conspicuous warning coloration). Whereas the survival consequences of these alternative defenses for individuals are well-studied, little attention has been given to the macroevolutionary consequences of alternative forms of defense. Here we show, using amphibians as the first, to our knowledge, large-scale empirical test in animals, that there are important macroevolutionary consequences of alternative defenses. However, the escape-and-radiate hypothesis does not adequately describe them, due to its exclusive focus on speciation. We examined how rates of speciation and extinction vary across defensive traits throughout amphibians. Lineages that use chemical defenses show higher rates of speciation as predicted by escape-and-radiate but also show higher rates of extinction compared with those without chemical defense. The effect of chemical defense is a net reduction in diversification compared with lineages without chemical defense. In contrast, acquisition of conspicuous coloration (often used as warning signals or in mimicry) is associated with heightened speciation rates but unchanged extinction rates. We conclude that predictions based on the escape-and-radiate hypothesis must incorporate the effect of traits on both speciation and extinction, which is rarely considered in such studies. Our results also suggest that knowledge of defensive traits could have a bearing on the predictability of extinction, perhaps especially important in globally threatened taxa such as amphibians.
“逃逸与辐射”假说预测,反捕食防御通过使生物摆脱捕食限制、实现栖息地利用多样化以及随后的物种形成,从而促进适应性辐射。动物已经进化出多种策略来降低捕食的直接成本,包括保护色和行为、化学防御、拟态以及表明不可食性(显著的警戒色)。虽然这些不同防御方式对个体生存的影响已得到充分研究,但对于不同防御形式的宏观进化后果却很少有人关注。在此,据我们所知,我们首次以两栖动物为研究对象,在动物界进行了大规模实证检验,结果表明不同防御方式具有重要的宏观进化后果。然而,“逃逸与辐射”假说并不能充分描述这些后果,因为它只专注于物种形成。我们研究了整个两栖动物中,物种形成和灭绝速率如何因防御特征而异。正如“逃逸与辐射”假说所预测的那样,采用化学防御的谱系显示出更高的物种形成速率,但与没有化学防御的谱系相比,其灭绝速率也更高。与没有化学防御的谱系相比,化学防御的影响是多样化的净减少。相比之下,获得显著的颜色(通常用作警告信号或用于拟态)与更高的物种形成速率相关,但灭绝速率不变。我们得出结论,基于“逃逸与辐射”假说的预测必须纳入性状对物种形成和灭绝的影响,而在这类研究中很少考虑这一点。我们的研究结果还表明,对防御性状的了解可能与灭绝的可预测性有关,这在全球受威胁的类群(如两栖动物)中可能尤为重要。