Simpson Carl, Jackson Jeremy B C, Herrera-Cubilla Amalia
Am Nat. 2017 Jul;190(1):17-28. doi: 10.1086/691789. Epub 2017 Apr 11.
Colonial animals commonly exhibit morphologically polymorphic modular units that are phenotypically distinct and specialize in specific functional tasks. But how and why these polymorphic modules have evolved is poorly understood. Across colonial invertebrates, there is wide variation in the degree of polymorphism, from none in colonial ascidians to extreme polymorphism in siphonophores, such as the Portuguese man-of-war. Bryozoa are a phylum of exclusively colonial invertebrates that uniquely exhibit almost the entire range of polymorphism, from monomorphic species to others that rival siphonophores in their polymorphic complexity. Previous approaches to understanding the evolution of polymorphism have been based on analyses of (1) the functional role of polymorphs or (2) presumed evolutionary costs and benefits based on evolutionary theory that postulates polymorphism should be evolutionarily sustainable only in more stable environments because polymorphism commonly leads to the loss of feeding and sexual competence. Here we use bryozoans from opposite shores of the Isthmus of Panama to revisit the environmental hypothesis by comparison of faunas from distinct oceanographic provinces that differ greatly in environmental variability, and we then examine the correlations between the extent of polymorphism in relation to patterns of ecological succession and variation in life histories. We find no support for the environmental hypothesis. Distributions of the incidence of polymorphism in the oceanographically unstable Eastern Pacific are indistinguishable from those in the more stable Caribbean. In contrast, the temporal position of species in a successional sequence is collinear with the degree of polymorphism because species with fewer types of polymorphs are competitively replaced by species with higher numbers of polymorphs on the same substrata. Competitively dominant species also exhibit patterns of growth that increase their competitive ability. The association between degrees of polymorphism and variations in life histories is fundamental to understanding of the macroevolution of polymorphism.
群体动物通常表现出形态上多态的模块单元,这些单元在表型上各不相同,并专门执行特定的功能任务。但这些多态模块是如何以及为何进化的,目前还知之甚少。在群体无脊椎动物中,多态性的程度差异很大,从群体海鞘中没有多态性到管水母中极端的多态性,比如僧帽水母。苔藓虫是一类完全由群体无脊椎动物组成的门,独特地展现了几乎整个多态性范围,从单态物种到多态复杂性可与管水母相媲美的其他物种。以前理解多态性进化的方法基于以下分析:(1)多态体的功能作用;(2)基于进化理论假定的进化成本和收益,该理论假设多态性仅在更稳定的环境中才应在进化上可持续,因为多态性通常会导致摄食和有性能力的丧失。在这里,我们利用来自巴拿马地峡两岸的苔藓虫,通过比较来自环境变异性差异很大的不同海洋学区域的动物群,重新审视环境假说,然后我们研究多态性程度与生态演替模式以及生活史变化之间的相关性。我们没有找到对环境假说的支持。在海洋学不稳定的东太平洋,多态性发生率的分布与更稳定的加勒比海地区没有区别。相反,物种在演替序列中的时间位置与多态性程度共线,因为在同一基质上,多态类型较少的物种会被多态类型较多的物种竞争性取代。具有竞争优势的物种也表现出增强其竞争能力的生长模式。多态性程度与生活史变化之间的关联对于理解多态性的宏观进化至关重要。