Winchell Kristin M, Reynolds R Graham, Prado-Irwin Sofia R, Puente-Rolón Alberto R, Revell Liam J
Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, Massachusetts, 02125.
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina Asheville, Asheville, North Carolina, 28804.
Evolution. 2016 May;70(5):1009-22. doi: 10.1111/evo.12925. Epub 2016 May 11.
Urbanization is an increasingly important dimension of global change, and urban areas likely impose significant natural selection on the species that reside within them. Although many species of plants and animals can survive in urban areas, so far relatively little research has investigated whether such populations have adapted (in an evolutionary sense) to their newfound milieu. Even less of this work has taken place in tropical regions, many of which have experienced dramatic growth and intensification of urbanization in recent decades. In the present study, we focus on the neotropical lizard, Anolis cristatellus. We tested whether lizard ecology and morphology differ between urban and natural areas in three of the most populous municipalities on the island of Puerto Rico. We found that environmental conditions including temperature, humidity, and substrate availability differ dramatically between neighboring urban and natural areas. We also found that lizards in urban areas use artificial substrates a large proportion of the time, and that these substrates tend to be broader than substrates in natural forest. Finally, our morphological data showed that lizards in urban areas have longer limbs relative to their body size, as well as more subdigital scales called lamellae, when compared to lizards from nearby forested habitats. This shift in phenotype is exactly in the direction predicted based on habitat differences between our urban and natural study sites, combined with our results on how substrates are being used by lizards in these areas. Findings from a common-garden rearing experiment using individuals from one of our three pairs of populations provide evidence that trait differences between urban and natural sites may be genetically based. Taken together, our data suggest that anoles in urban areas are under significant differential natural selection and may be evolutionarily adapting to their human-modified environments.
城市化是全球变化中一个日益重要的方面,城市地区可能对栖息其中的物种施加显著的自然选择。尽管许多动植物物种能够在城市地区生存,但迄今为止,相对较少的研究调查了这些种群是否(从进化意义上讲)适应了它们新发现的环境。在热带地区开展的此类研究更少,而近几十年来,许多热带地区经历了城市化的急剧增长和强化。在本研究中,我们聚焦于新热带蜥蜴——冠变色龙。我们测试了在波多黎各岛人口最多的三个城市中,城市和自然区域的蜥蜴在生态和形态上是否存在差异。我们发现,相邻的城市和自然区域之间,包括温度、湿度和底物可用性在内的环境条件存在显著差异。我们还发现,城市地区的蜥蜴大部分时间使用人工底物,而且这些底物往往比天然森林中的底物更宽。最后,我们的形态学数据表明,与来自附近森林栖息地的蜥蜴相比,城市地区的蜥蜴相对于其体型而言四肢更长,并且具有更多称为栉缘的亚趾鳞片。这种表型变化恰恰朝着基于我们城市和自然研究地点之间栖息地差异所预测的方向发展,同时结合了我们关于这些区域蜥蜴如何利用底物的研究结果。一项使用我们三对种群之一的个体进行的共同饲养实验结果表明,城市和自然地点之间的性状差异可能是基于基因的。综合来看,我们的数据表明城市地区的变色龙正处于显著的差异自然选择之下,并且可能正在进化以适应它们被人类改造的环境。