Van Den Elzen Courtney L, Kleynhans Elizabeth J, Otto Sarah P
Department of Zoology and Biodiversity Research Centre, University of British Columbia, 6270 University Boulevard, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z4.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado at Boulder, 1900 Pleasant Street, 334 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309-0334, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2017 Jun 28;284(1857). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2017.0374.
Interspecific competition can strongly influence the evolutionary response of a species to a changing environment, impacting the chance that the species survives or goes extinct. Previous work has shown that when two species compete for a temporally shifting resource distribution, the species lagging behind the resource peak is the first to go extinct due to competitive exclusion. However, this work assumed symmetrically distributed resources and competition. Asymmetries can generate differences between species in population sizes, genetic variation and trait means. We show that asymmetric resource availability or competition can facilitate coexistence and even occasionally cause the leading species to go extinct first. Surprisingly, we also find cases where traits evolve in the opposite direction to the changing environment because of a 'vacuum of competitive release' created when the lagging species declines in number. Thus, the species exhibiting the slowest rate of trait evolution is not always the most likely to go extinct in a changing environment. Our results demonstrate that the extent to which species appear to be tracking environmental change and the extent to which they are preadapted to that change may not necessarily determine which species will be the winners and which will be the losers in a rapidly changing world.
种间竞争能够强烈影响一个物种对不断变化的环境的进化响应,影响该物种生存或灭绝的几率。先前的研究表明,当两个物种竞争随时间变化的资源分布时,落后于资源峰值的物种会由于竞争排斥而首先灭绝。然而,这项研究假设资源和竞争是对称分布的。不对称性会在种群大小、遗传变异和性状均值方面造成物种间的差异。我们发现,资源可利用性或竞争的不对称能够促进共存,甚至偶尔会导致领先物种首先灭绝。令人惊讶的是,我们还发现,由于落后物种数量减少产生了“竞争释放真空”,某些情况下性状会朝着与变化环境相反的方向进化。因此,在不断变化的环境中,性状进化速率最慢的物种不一定总是最有可能灭绝的。我们的研究结果表明,物种看似追踪环境变化的程度以及它们预先适应这种变化的程度,不一定能决定在快速变化的世界中哪些物种会成为赢家,哪些会成为输家。