Wright Natalie A, Steadman David W, Witt Christopher C
Department of Biology and Museum of Southwestern Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001; Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812;
Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-7800.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Apr 26;113(17):4765-70. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1522931113. Epub 2016 Apr 11.
Birds are prolific colonists of islands, where they readily evolve distinct forms. Identifying predictable, directional patterns of evolutionary change in island birds, however, has proved challenging. The "island rule" predicts that island species evolve toward intermediate sizes, but its general applicability to birds is questionable. However, convergent evolution has clearly occurred in the island bird lineages that have undergone transitions to secondary flightlessness, a process involving drastic reduction of the flight muscles and enlargement of the hindlimbs. Here, we investigated whether volant island bird populations tend to change shape in a way that converges subtly on the flightless form. We found that island bird species have evolved smaller flight muscles than their continental relatives. Furthermore, in 366 populations of Caribbean and Pacific birds, smaller flight muscles and longer legs evolved in response to increasing insularity and, strikingly, the scarcity of avian and mammalian predators. On smaller islands with fewer predators, birds exhibited shifts in investment from forelimbs to hindlimbs that were qualitatively similar to anatomical rearrangements observed in flightless birds. These findings suggest that island bird populations tend to evolve on a trajectory toward flightlessness, even if most remain volant. This pattern was consistent across nine families and four orders that vary in lifestyle, foraging behavior, flight style, and body size. These predictable shifts in avian morphology may reduce the physical capacity for escape via flight and diminish the potential for small-island taxa to diversify via dispersal.
鸟类是岛屿上数量众多的殖民者,它们很容易进化出独特的形态。然而,要确定岛屿鸟类进化变化中可预测的、方向性的模式却颇具挑战。“岛屿法则”预测岛屿物种会朝着中等体型进化,但其对鸟类的普遍适用性值得怀疑。然而,在经历向次生无飞行能力转变(这一过程涉及飞行肌肉的大幅减少和后肢的增大)的岛屿鸟类谱系中,趋同进化显然已经发生。在这里,我们研究了能飞的岛屿鸟类种群是否倾向于以一种与无飞行能力形态微妙趋同的方式改变体型。我们发现,岛屿鸟类物种进化出的飞行肌肉比它们大陆上的近亲更小。此外,在加勒比海和太平洋地区的366个鸟类种群中,随着岛屿与世隔绝程度的增加以及显著的是,随着鸟类和哺乳动物捕食者的稀缺,飞行肌肉变小和腿部变长的情况出现了。在捕食者较少的较小岛屿上,鸟类表现出从四肢向四肢的投资转移,这在性质上与在无飞行能力鸟类中观察到的解剖结构重排相似。这些发现表明,岛屿鸟类种群即使大多数仍然能够飞行,也倾向于在朝着无飞行能力的轨迹上进化。这种模式在九个科和四个目中都是一致的,这些科和目在生活方式、觅食行为、飞行方式和体型大小方面各不相同。鸟类形态的这些可预测变化可能会降低通过飞行逃脱的身体能力,并减少小岛屿分类群通过扩散实现多样化的潜力。