Neiman Maurine, Krist Amy
Department of Biology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, 52245, USA.
Department of Zoology and Physiology, Program in Ecology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, 82071, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2016 Oct;26(7):2218-2224. doi: 10.1002/eap.1372. Epub 2016 Sep 20.
Why some species and lineages are more likely to be invasive than others is one of the most important unanswered questions in basic and applied biology. In particular, the relative contributions to the invasion process of factors like pre-adaptation to invasiveness in the native range, evolution post-colonization, and random vs. non-random sampling of colonist lineages remain unclear. We use a powerful common garden approach to address the potential for a role for sensitivity to nutrient limitation in determining the invasiveness of particular lineages of Potamopyrgus antipodarum, a New Zealand freshwater snail that has become globally invasive. We quantified specific growth rate (SGR), an important fitness-related trait in this species, under high phosphorus (P) vs. low-P conditions for a diverse set of native and invasive P. antipodarum. This experiment revealed that native-range P. antipodarum experience a more severe decline in SGR in low-P conditions relative to SGR in high-P conditions than their invasive range counterparts. Although these results suggest resilience to P limitation in invasive lineages, the absence of significant absolute differences in SGR between native and invasive lineages indicates that a straightforward connection between response to P limitation and invasiveness in P. antipodarum is unlikely. Regardless, our data demonstrate that invasive vs. native lineages of P. antipodarum exhibit consistently different responses to an important environmental variable that is rarely studied in the context of invasion success. Further studies directed at exploring and disentangling the roles of sampling effects, selection on preexisting variation, and evolution after colonization will be required to provide a comprehensive picture of the role (or lack thereof) of nutrient limitation in the global invasion of P. antipodarum, as well for as other invasive taxa.
为什么有些物种和谱系比其他物种更有可能成为入侵物种,这是基础生物学和应用生物学中最重要的未解问题之一。特别是,对于诸如在原生范围内对入侵性的预适应、定殖后的进化以及殖民者谱系的随机与非随机抽样等因素在入侵过程中的相对贡献仍不清楚。我们采用一种强大的共同花园方法,来研究对养分限制的敏感性在决定新西兰淡水蜗牛新西兰泥蜗特定谱系的入侵性方面所起作用的可能性,这种蜗牛已在全球范围内形成入侵。我们在高磷(P)与低磷条件下,对一系列不同的原生和入侵的新西兰泥蜗量化了特定生长率(SGR),这是该物种一个与适合度相关的重要性状。该实验表明,相对于高磷条件下的SGR,原生范围内的新西兰泥蜗在低磷条件下SGR的下降幅度比入侵范围内的同类更大。尽管这些结果表明入侵谱系对磷限制具有恢复力,但原生和入侵谱系之间SGR没有显著的绝对差异,这表明新西兰泥蜗对磷限制的反应与入侵性之间不太可能存在直接联系。无论如何,我们的数据表明,新西兰泥蜗的入侵谱系与原生谱系对一个重要环境变量表现出持续不同的反应,而在入侵成功的背景下,这个变量很少被研究。需要进一步开展研究,以探索和厘清抽样效应、对现有变异的选择以及定殖后的进化所起的作用,从而全面了解磷限制在新西兰泥蜗全球入侵过程中所起的作用(或不存在的作用),以及对其他入侵类群的作用。