CREAF, Cerdanyola del Vallès, 08193 Catalonia, Spain.
Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 01238, USA.
Nat Commun. 2016 Dec 22;7:13971. doi: 10.1038/ncomms13971.
Environmental variability has long been postulated as a major selective force in the evolution of large brains. However, assembling evidence for this hypothesis has proved difficult. Here, by combining brain size information for over 1,200 bird species with remote-sensing analyses to estimate temporal variation in ecosystem productivity, we show that larger brains (relative to body size) are more likely to occur in species exposed to larger environmental variation throughout their geographic range. Our reconstructions of evolutionary trajectories are consistent with the hypothesis that larger brains (relative to body size) evolved when the species invaded more seasonal regions. However, the alternative-that the species already possessed larger brains when they invaded more seasonal regions-cannot be completely ruled out. Regardless of the exact mechanism, our findings provide strong empirical support for the association between large brains and environmental variability.
环境变异性长期以来一直被认为是大脑进化的主要选择力量。然而,为这一假设收集证据一直很困难。在这里,我们通过结合超过 1200 种鸟类的大脑大小信息和遥感分析来估计生态系统生产力的时间变化,结果表明,在地理分布范围内暴露于更大环境变化的物种更有可能拥有更大的大脑(相对于身体大小)。我们对进化轨迹的重建与这样的假设一致,即当物种侵入更具季节性的地区时,更大的大脑(相对于身体大小)进化而来。然而,物种在侵入更具季节性的地区时已经拥有更大的大脑这一替代假设,也不能完全排除。无论确切的机制是什么,我们的发现都为大脑大小与环境变异性之间的关联提供了强有力的经验支持。