Dennison Michael D, Baker Allan J
Department of Zoology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, M5S 1A1, CANADA.
Department of Ornithology, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, ON, M5S 2C6, CANADA.
Evolution. 1991 Feb;45(1):29-39. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1991.tb05263.x.
The magnitudes of phenotypic variances in peripherally isolated populations of common chaffinches (Fringilla coelebs) in the Azores, Madeira, and Canaries relative to their continental source populations in Iberia and Morocco have played a pivotal role in the formulation of competing hypotheses of phenotypic evolution in these isolates. Because Van Valen's niche variation hypothesis and Grant's model of island evolution were based on museum skins prone to measurement error and temporal variation, we re-examined the patterns of phenotypic variability using more precise skeletal measurements from freshly collected specimens. Levene's tests showed that univariate character variances were homogeneous in all island and continental populations, although there was a consistent trend for the magnitude of the variances to be lower for all characters in all Canary island populations. Multivariate Levene's tests, however, revealed significantly reduced total variances in the Hierro and Madeira populations compared to some Azores and continental populations. The Azores and continental populations did not differ in variability, and lower variances in the Canaries were not related to the presence or absence of the congeneric blue chaffinch (F. teydea), contrary to the predictions of Van Valen's niche variation hypothesis. Population variability was not inversely related to differentiation or isolation within the Azores or Canaries archipelagoes, opposite to the association reported by Grant. Our results also differ from both previous studies which reported much larger differences in population variabilities, and this likely reflects the use of heterogeneous samples of museum specimens, less precise external characters, and the use of tests sensitive to sample size. Differentiation among populations has been markedly greater in the Canary islands, implicating founder events and possibly historically stronger directional selection as determinants of this enhanced divergence relative to the Azores. These variance-reducing processes are unlikely to explain current lower levels of phenotypic variability because there has been sufficient time since colonization for replenishment of variability in polygenic characters. Average heterozygosities at putatively neutral allozyme loci are 1.6 times higher in the Azores compared to the Canaries, and support the view that effective population sizes are smaller in the latter archipelago. We argue that reduced variances in the Canary island populations represent lower equilibrium levels maintained by drift and mutation in populations with smaller long-term effective sizes, consistent with Lynch and Hill's neutral model of phenotypic evolution. Although episodes of selection in the past may have been interspersed with long periods of effective neutralism and drift, adaptationist hypotheses invoking a primary role for variance-reducing selection appear to be unwarranted.
亚速尔群岛、马德拉群岛和加那利群岛上普通苍头燕雀(Fringilla coelebs)外周隔离种群相对于其在伊比利亚半岛和摩洛哥的大陆源种群的表型变异幅度,在这些隔离种群表型进化的竞争假说形成中起到了关键作用。由于范·瓦伦的生态位变异假说和格兰特的岛屿进化模型是基于容易产生测量误差和时间变异的博物馆标本皮张,我们使用新鲜采集标本的更精确骨骼测量数据重新审视了表型变异模式。莱文检验表明,单变量性状方差在所有岛屿和大陆种群中是同质的,尽管加那利群岛所有种群中所有性状的方差幅度都有一致的降低趋势。然而,多变量莱文检验显示,与一些亚速尔群岛和大陆种群相比,耶罗岛和马德拉群岛种群的总方差显著降低。亚速尔群岛和大陆种群在变异性上没有差异,加那利群岛较低的方差与同属的蓝翅雀(F. teydea)的有无无关,这与范·瓦伦的生态位变异假说的预测相反。种群变异性与亚速尔群岛或加那利群岛群岛内部的分化或隔离没有负相关,这与格兰特报道的关联相反。我们的结果也与之前两项报道种群变异性差异大得多的研究不同,这可能反映了对博物馆标本的异质样本的使用、不太精确的外部性状以及对样本量敏感的检验的使用。加那利群岛种群之间的分化明显更大,这意味着奠基者事件以及可能历史上更强的定向选择是相对于亚速尔群岛这种增强分化的决定因素。这些降低方差的过程不太可能解释当前较低水平的表型变异性,因为自殖民以来已有足够时间补充多基因性状的变异性。亚速尔群岛假定中性等位酶位点的平均杂合度比加那利群岛高1.6倍,这支持了后一个群岛有效种群规模较小的观点。我们认为,加那利群岛种群方差的降低代表了在长期有效规模较小的种群中由漂变和突变维持的较低平衡水平,这与林奇和希尔的表型进化中性模型一致。尽管过去的选择事件可能与长时间的有效中性和漂变穿插出现,但援引降低方差选择的主要作用的适应主义假说似乎没有根据。