Owen Dustin A S, Robbins Travis R, Langkilde Tracy
Intercollege Graduate Degree Program in Ecology and Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, 16802, United States.
Department of Biology, University of Nebraska Omaha, University Park, PA, 16802, United States.
Oecologia. 2018 Feb;186(2):347-355. doi: 10.1007/s00442-017-3991-4. Epub 2017 Nov 30.
Environmental changes, such as the introduction of non-native species, can impose novel selective pressures. This can result in changes in fitness-relevant traits within an individual's lifetime or across multiple generations. We investigated the effects of early life versus trans-generational exposure to a predatory invasive insect stressor, the red imported fire ant (Solenopsis invicta), on the morphology and survival of the eastern fence lizard (Sceloporus undulatus). We captured gravid lizards from high-stress populations with long histories of invasion by fire ants and from uninvaded sites. Resulting hatchlings were exposed weekly to one of the three treatments until they reached maturity (42 weeks): (1) sub-lethal attack by fire ants; (2) topical application of the stress-relevant hormone, corticosterone (CORT), to mimic the stress of fire ant attack; or (3) control handling. Exposure to post-natal early life stress (fire ants or CORT) did not interact with a population's evolutionary history of stress to affect morphology or survival and early life stress did not affect these fitness-relevant traits. However, morphology and survival were associated with the lizards' evolutionary history of exposure to fire ants. Offspring of lizards from fire ant invaded sites had longer and faster growing hind-limbs, gained body length and lost condition more slowly in the first 16 weeks, and had lower in-lab survival to 42 weeks, compared to lizards from uninvaded sites. These results suggest that a population's history of stress/invasion caused by fire ants during ca. 38 generations may be more important in driving survival-relevant traits than are the early life experiences of an organism.
环境变化,如引入非本地物种,可能会带来新的选择压力。这可能导致个体一生中或多代间与适应性相关的性状发生变化。我们研究了早期生活暴露与跨代暴露于一种捕食性入侵昆虫应激源——红火蚁(Solenopsis invicta)对东部围栏蜥蜴(Sceloporus undulatus)形态和生存的影响。我们从受红火蚁长期入侵的高压力种群以及未受入侵的地点捕获怀孕的蜥蜴。将孵化出的幼蜥每周暴露于三种处理之一,直至其达到成熟(42周):(1)受到红火蚁的亚致死攻击;(2)局部应用与应激相关的激素皮质酮(CORT)以模拟红火蚁攻击的应激;或(3)对照处理。出生后早期生活应激(红火蚁或CORT)与种群的应激进化史之间不存在相互作用来影响形态或生存,且早期生活应激并未影响这些与适应性相关的性状。然而,形态和生存与蜥蜴接触红火蚁的进化史有关。与来自未受入侵地点的蜥蜴相比,来自受红火蚁入侵地点的蜥蜴的后代具有更长且生长更快的后肢,在最初16周内体长增加且身体状况下降更慢,并且在实验室中活到42周的存活率更低。这些结果表明,在大约38代期间由红火蚁引起的种群应激/入侵历史,在驱动与生存相关的性状方面可能比生物体的早期生活经历更为重要。