Ng'oma Enoch, Perinchery Anna M, King Elizabeth G
Division of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USA
Division of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2017 Jun 28;284(1857). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2017.0445.
All organisms use resources to grow, survive and reproduce. The supply of these resources varies widely across landscapes and time, imposing ultimate constraints on the maximal trait values for allocation-related traits. In this review, we address three key questions fundamental to our understanding of the evolution of allocation strategies and their underlying mechanisms. First, we ask: how diverse are flexible resource allocation strategies among different organisms? We find there are many, varied, examples of flexible strategies that depend on nutrition. However, this diversity is often ignored in some of the best-known cases of resource allocation shifts, such as the commonly observed pattern of lifespan extension under nutrient limitation. A greater appreciation of the wide variety of flexible allocation strategies leads directly to our second major question: what conditions select for different plastic allocation strategies? Here, we highlight the need for additional models that explicitly consider the evolution of phenotypically plastic allocation strategies and empirical tests of the predictions of those models in natural populations. Finally, we consider the question: what are the underlying mechanisms determining resource allocation strategies? Although evolutionary biologists assume differential allocation of resources is a major factor limiting trait evolution, few proximate mechanisms are known that specifically support the model. We argue that an integrated framework can reconcile evolutionary models with proximate mechanisms that appear at first glance to be in conflict with these models. Overall, we encourage future studies to: (i) mimic ecological conditions in which those patterns evolve, and (ii) take advantage of the 'omic' opportunities to produce multi-level data and analytical models that effectively integrate across physiological and evolutionary theory.
所有生物都利用资源来生长、生存和繁殖。这些资源的供应在不同的景观和时间中差异很大,对与分配相关性状的最大性状值施加了最终限制。在本综述中,我们探讨了理解分配策略及其潜在机制进化的三个关键基本问题。首先,我们提出问题:不同生物之间灵活的资源分配策略有多少种?我们发现有许多不同的依赖营养的灵活策略实例。然而,在一些最著名的资源分配变化案例中,这种多样性常常被忽视,比如在营养限制下普遍观察到的寿命延长模式。对各种灵活分配策略有更深入的认识直接引出了我们的第二个主要问题:哪些条件会选择不同的可塑性分配策略?在这里,我们强调需要额外的模型,这些模型要明确考虑表型可塑性分配策略的进化以及对这些模型在自然种群中的预测进行实证检验。最后,我们考虑这个问题:决定资源分配策略的潜在机制是什么?尽管进化生物学家认为资源的差异分配是限制性状进化的一个主要因素,但几乎没有已知的具体支持该模型的近端机制。我们认为一个综合框架可以使进化模型与乍一看似乎与这些模型相冲突的近端机制相协调。总体而言,我们鼓励未来的研究:(i)模拟那些模式进化的生态条件,以及(ii)利用“组学”机会来生成有效整合生理和进化理论的多层次数据和分析模型。