Larsson Kjell, van der Jeugd Henk P, van der Veen Ineke T, Forslund Pär
Department of Zoology, Uppsala University, Villavägen 9, S-752 36, Uppsala, Sweden.
Zoological Laboratory, University of Groningen, P.O. Box 14, NL-9750, AA Haren, The Netherlands.
Evolution. 1998 Aug;52(4):1169-1184. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1998.tb01843.x.
Analyses of more than 2000 marked barnacle geese (Branta leucopsis) in the largest Baltic colony, Sweden, showed that structurally large females generally produced larger clutches and larger eggs, hatched their broods earlier in the season, and produced more and heavier young than smaller females. In males, the corresponding relationships between reproductive parameters and structural body size were weaker or nonsignificant. Because structural body size traits have previously been found to be significantly heritable and positively genetically correlated, an increase in mean structural body size of individuals as a response to selection might have been expected. By contrast, we found that the mean adult head length and mean adult tarsus length decreased significantly in the largest colony by approximately 0.7 and 0.5 standard deviations, respectively, in both males and females during the 13-year study period. Environmental factors, such as the amount of rain in different years, were found to affect the availability of high-quality food for growing geese. As a consequence of this temporal variability in the availability of high-quality food, the mean adult structural body size of different cohorts differed by up to 1.3 standard deviations. Comparisons of mean body size of cohorts born in different colonies suggest that the most likely explanation for the body-size decline in the main study colony is that a density-dependent process, which mainly was in effect during the very early phase of colony growth, negatively affected juvenile growth and final size. We conclude that large environmental effects on growth and final structural body size easily can mask microevolutionary responses to selection. Analyses of environmental causes underlying temporal and spatial body size variation should always be considered in the reconstruction and prediction of evolutionary changes in natural populations.
对瑞典波罗的海最大种群中2000多只有标记的白额黑雁(Branta leucopsis)的分析表明,体型较大的雌性通常产蛋量更多、蛋更大,在季节早期孵化幼雏,并且比体型较小的雌性产出更多、更重的幼雏。在雄性中,生殖参数与身体结构大小之间的相应关系较弱或不显著。由于先前已发现身体结构大小特征具有显著的遗传性且呈正遗传相关,因此预期个体的平均身体结构大小会因选择而增加。相比之下,我们发现,在为期13年的研究期间,最大种群中雄性和雌性的成年平均头长和成年平均跗跖长分别显著下降了约0.7和0.5个标准差。研究发现,不同年份的降雨量等环境因素会影响幼鹅优质食物的供应。由于优质食物供应的这种时间变异性,不同队列的成年平均身体结构大小相差高达1.3个标准差。对不同种群出生的队列平均体型的比较表明,主要研究种群体型下降的最可能解释是,一个主要在种群增长非常早期阶段起作用的密度依赖过程对幼体生长和最终体型产生了负面影响。我们得出结论,环境对生长和最终身体结构大小的巨大影响很容易掩盖对选择的微观进化反应。在重建和预测自然种群的进化变化时,应始终考虑对时间和空间体型变化背后的环境原因进行分析。