Herr Mark W, Robbins Travis R, Centi Alan, Thawley Christopher J, Langkilde Tracy
Department of Biology, Pennsylvania State University, 208 Mueller Lab, University Park, PA, 16802, USA.
Department of Biology, Chemistry, and Environmental Science, Northern New Mexico College, Española, NM, 87501, USA.
Oecologia. 2016 Jul;181(3):749-56. doi: 10.1007/s00442-016-3596-3. Epub 2016 Mar 21.
As species become increasingly exposed to novel challenges, it is critical to understand how evolutionary (i.e., generational) and plastic (i.e., within lifetime) responses work together to determine a species' fate or predict its distribution. The introduction of non-native species imposes novel pressures on the native species that they encounter. Understanding how native species exposed to toxic or distasteful invaders change their feeding behavior can provide insight into their ability to cope with these novel threats as well as broader questions about the evolution of this behavior. We demonstrated that native eastern fence lizards do not avoid consuming invasive fire ants following repeated exposure to this toxic prey. Rather fence lizards increased their consumption of these ants following exposure on three different temporal scales. Lizards ate more fire ants when they were exposed to this toxic prey over successive days. Lizards consumed more fire ants if they had been exposed to fire ants as juveniles 6 months earlier. Finally, lizards from populations exposed to fire ants over multiple generations consumed more fire ants than those from fire ant-free areas. These results suggest that the potentially lethal consumption of fire ants may carry benefits resulting in selection for this behavior, and learning that persists long after initial exposure. Future research on the response of native predators to venomous prey over multiple temporal scales will be valuable in determining the long-term effects of invasion by these novel threats.
随着物种越来越多地面临新的挑战,了解进化(即代际)反应和可塑性(即个体生命周期内)反应如何共同作用以决定一个物种的命运或预测其分布至关重要。引入非本地物种会给它们所遇到的本地物种带来新的压力。了解接触有毒或难吃的入侵者的本地物种如何改变其摄食行为,有助于洞察它们应对这些新威胁的能力,以及关于这种行为进化的更广泛问题。我们证明,本地东部围栏蜥蜴在反复接触这种有毒猎物后,并不会避免食用入侵的火蚁。相反,围栏蜥蜴在三种不同的时间尺度上接触火蚁后,会增加对它们的食用量。当蜥蜴连续几天接触这种有毒猎物时,它们会吃掉更多的火蚁。如果蜥蜴在6个月前的幼年时期接触过火蚁,那么它们会消耗更多的火蚁。最后,多代接触过火蚁的种群中的蜥蜴比来自无火蚁地区的蜥蜴消耗更多的火蚁。这些结果表明,食用可能致命的火蚁可能会带来好处,从而导致对这种行为的选择,以及在初次接触后很长时间仍持续存在的学习行为。未来关于本地捕食者在多个时间尺度上对有毒猎物的反应的研究,对于确定这些新威胁入侵的长期影响将是有价值的。