Department of Biological Sciences and W.M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695.
J Hered. 2017 Dec 21;109(1):59-70. doi: 10.1093/jhered/esx043.
Environments shape the traits of organisms. Environmental variation may rarely alter selection on only a few traits, but instead precipitate wholesale changes of the multidimensional selective regime-many traits might experience divergent selection across divergent environments. Such changes in selection can elicit multifarious evolution. How predictable (from theory) and how parallel (consistent occurrences) is multitrait divergence across replicated environments? Here, I address this question using the post-Pleistocene radiation of Bahamas mosquitofish (Gambusia hubbsi) inhabiting blue holes on Andros Island. These fish independently colonized numerous blue holes, some that harbor a major fish predator (bigmouth sleeper, Gobiomorus dormitor) and some that lack any major predators. I used 5 approaches to quantitatively explore the predictability and parallelism of multitrait divergence between predation regimes in Bahamas mosquitofish. Synthesizing data for 90 traits from 13 different types of character suites (e.g., body morphology, life history, genital morphology, coloration, mating preference, habitat use), I found widespread evidence for strong, predictable, and parallel divergence between predation regimes. Yet despite the great majority of traits showing predictable trajectories of change, and the majority of traits showing significant parallelism and strong magnitudes of predictable divergence, I uncovered that over half of the overall phenotypic variation among populations was not driven by variation in predation regime. Results suggest that focusing on few traits, or focusing on parallel aspects of divergence, can provide a misleading picture of adaptation, and nonparallel divergence appears widespread and warrants greater attention. Taking a multitrait perspective, and quantifying predictability and parallelism, can yield important insights.
环境塑造生物的特征。环境变化很少只改变少数几个特征的选择,而是会引发多维选择的整体变化——许多特征可能会在不同的环境中经历不同的选择。这种选择的变化可以引发多种进化。在复制的环境中,多性状分歧的可预测性(来自理论)和并行性(一致发生)如何?在这里,我使用了生活在安德罗斯岛蓝洞的巴哈马食蚊鱼(Gambusia hubbsi)在后更新世辐射的例子来回答这个问题。这些鱼独立地殖民了许多蓝洞,其中一些有主要的鱼类捕食者(大嘴睡鲨,Gobiomorus dormitor),而另一些则没有任何主要的捕食者。我使用了 5 种方法来定量地探索巴哈马食蚊鱼在捕食者制度之间的多性状分歧的可预测性和并行性。综合了来自 13 种不同特征组合(如身体形态、生活史、生殖器形态、颜色、交配偏好、栖息地利用)的 90 个特征的数据,我发现了强有力的、可预测的和并行的分歧证据。然而,尽管绝大多数特征表现出可预测的变化轨迹,并且大多数特征表现出显著的平行性和强烈的可预测分歧幅度,但我发现,超过一半的种群之间的整体表型变异不是由捕食者制度的变化驱动的。结果表明,关注少数几个特征,或者关注分歧的平行方面,可能会对适应产生误导,而非平行的分歧似乎很普遍,值得更多关注。从多性状的角度出发,量化可预测性和并行性,可以产生重要的见解。