Petranka James W, Sih Andrew
Behavioral and Evolutionary Ecology Group, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, 40506-0225.
Evolution. 1987 Nov;41(6):1347-1356. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1987.tb02472.x.
In many organisms, genotypic selection may be a less effective means of adapting to unpredictable environments than is selection for phenotypic plasticity. To determine whether genotypic selection is important in the evolution of complex life cycles of amphibians that breed in seasonally ephemeral habitats, we examined whether mortality risk from habitat drying in natural populations of small-mouthed salamanders (Ambystoma texanum) corresponded to length of larval period when larvae from the same populations were grown in a common laboratory environment. Comparisons were made at two levels of organization within the species: 1) among geographic races that are under strongly divergent selection regimes associated with the use of pond and stream habitats and 2) among populations within races that use the same types of breeding habitats. Morphological evidence indicates that stream-breeding A. texanum evolved from pond-breeding populations that recently colonized streams. Larvae in streams incur heavy mortality from stream drying, so the upper bound on length of larval period is currently set by the seasonal duration of breeding sites. We hypothesized that selection would reduce length of larval period of pond-breeders that colonize streams if their larval periods are inherently longer than those of stream-breeders. The results of laboratory experiments support this hypothesis. When grown individually in a common environment, larvae from stream populations had significantly shorter larval periods than larvae from pond populations. Within races, however, length of larval period did not correlate significantly with seasonal duration of breeding sites. When males of both races were crossed to a single pond female, offspring of stream males had significantly shorter larval periods than offspring of pond males. Collectively, these data suggest that differences in complex life cycles among pond and stream-breeders are due to genotypic selection related to mortality from habitat drying. Stream larvae in the common-environment experiment were significantly smaller at metamorphosis than pond larvae. Yet, the evolution of metamorphic size cannot be explained readily by direct selection: there are no intuitively obvious advantages of being relatively small at metamorphosis in streams. A positive phenotypic correlation was observed between size at metamorphosis and length of larval period in most laboratory populations. A positive additive genetic correlation between these traits was demonstrated recently in another amphibian. Thus, we suspect that metamorphic size of stream-breeders evolved indirectly as a consequence of selection to shorten length of larval period.
在许多生物体中,与选择表型可塑性相比,基因型选择可能是一种不太有效的适应不可预测环境的方式。为了确定基因型选择在繁殖于季节性短暂栖息地的两栖动物复杂生命周期的进化中是否重要,我们研究了小口蝾螈(Ambystoma texanum)自然种群中栖息地干涸导致的死亡风险是否与同一种群的幼虫在共同实验室环境中生长时的幼虫期长度相对应。在物种内的两个组织层次上进行了比较:1)在与池塘和溪流栖息地利用相关的强烈分化选择制度下的地理种群之间;2)在使用相同类型繁殖栖息地的种群内的不同种群之间。形态学证据表明,在溪流中繁殖的德克萨斯钝口螈是从最近殖民溪流的池塘繁殖种群进化而来的。溪流中的幼虫因溪流干涸而死亡率很高,因此幼虫期长度的上限目前由繁殖地点的季节性持续时间决定。我们假设,如果池塘繁殖者的幼虫期天生比溪流繁殖者的幼虫期长,那么选择将缩短在溪流中繁殖的池塘繁殖者的幼虫期长度。实验室实验结果支持了这一假设。当在共同环境中单独生长时,溪流种群的幼虫比池塘种群的幼虫幼虫期明显更短。然而,在种群内,幼虫期长度与繁殖地点的季节性持续时间没有显著相关性。当两个种群的雄性与一只单一的池塘雌性杂交时,溪流雄性的后代比池塘雄性的后代幼虫期明显更短。总体而言,这些数据表明,池塘繁殖者和溪流繁殖者之间复杂生命周期的差异是由于与栖息地干涸导致的死亡率相关的基因型选择。在共同环境实验中,溪流幼虫在变态时明显比池塘幼虫小。然而,变态大小的进化不能通过直接选择轻易解释:在溪流中变态时相对较小并没有直观上明显的优势。在大多数实验室种群中,观察到变态时的大小与幼虫期长度之间存在正表型相关性。最近在另一种两栖动物中证明了这些性状之间存在正加性遗传相关性。因此,我们怀疑溪流繁殖者的变态大小是作为选择缩短幼虫期长度的结果而间接进化的。