The Kyushu University Museum, Hakozaki 6-10-1, Fukuoka-shi, Fukuoka 812-8581, Japan.
Department of Genetics and Development, Columbia University, 701 West 168(th) Street, New York, NY 10032, USA; Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West at 79th Street, New York, NY 10024, USA.
Curr Biol. 2017 Mar 20;27(6):920-926. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.02.030. Epub 2017 Mar 9.
Recent adaptive radiations provide striking examples of convergence [1-4], but the predictability of evolution over much deeper timescales is controversial, with a scarcity of ancient clades exhibiting repetitive patterns of phenotypic evolution [5, 6]. Army ants are ecologically dominant arthropod predators of the world's tropics, with large nomadic colonies housing diverse communities of socially parasitic myrmecophiles [7]. Remarkable among these are many species of rove beetle (Staphylinidae) that exhibit ant-mimicking "myrmecoid" body forms and are behaviorally accepted into their aggressive hosts' societies: emigrating with colonies and inhabiting temporary nest bivouacs, grooming and feeding with workers, but also consuming the brood [8-11]. Here, we demonstrate that myrmecoid rove beetles are strongly polyphyletic, with this adaptive morphological and behavioral syndrome having evolved at least 12 times during the evolution of a single staphylinid subfamily, Aleocharinae. Each independent myrmecoid clade is restricted to one zoogeographic region and highly host specific on a single army ant genus. Dating estimates reveal that myrmecoid clades are separated by substantial phylogenetic distances-as much as 105 million years. All such groups arose in parallel during the Cenozoic, when army ants diversified into modern genera [12] and rose to ecological dominance [13, 14]. This work uncovers a rare example of an ancient system of complex morphological and behavioral convergence, with replicate beetle lineages following a predictable phenotypic trajectory during their parasitic adaptation to host colonies.
最近的适应性辐射为趋同进化提供了引人注目的例子[1-4],但在更深远的时间尺度上,进化的可预测性是有争议的,很少有古老的分支表现出重复的表型进化模式[5,6]。军蚁是热带地区生态上占优势的节肢动物捕食者,它们拥有大型的游牧群体,容纳着各种社会性寄生的拟蚁生物群落[7]。在这些生物中,引人注目的是许多种隐翅虫(隐翅虫科),它们表现出模仿蚂蚁的“拟蚁状”身体形态,并且在行为上被其具有攻击性的宿主社会所接受:与蚁群一起迁徙,并居住在临时的巢露营地,与工蚁一起梳理和喂养,但也会吃掉幼虫[8-11]。在这里,我们证明拟蚁状隐翅虫是强烈的多系的,这种适应性形态和行为综合征至少在一个单一的隐翅虫亚科,Aleocharinae 中进化了 12 次。每个独立的拟蚁状隐翅虫分支都局限于一个动物地理区域,并对单一的军蚁属具有高度的宿主特异性。约会估计表明,拟蚁状隐翅虫分支之间存在着实质性的系统发育距离——多达 1.05 亿年。所有这些群体都是在新生代平行出现的,当时军蚁分化成了现代属[12],并上升到了生态优势地位[13,14]。这项工作揭示了一个罕见的古老系统的复杂形态和行为趋同的例子,在寄生适应宿主群体的过程中,重复的甲虫谱系遵循着可预测的表型轨迹。