Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN, USA.
School of Biology, Centre for Biological Diversity, University of St Andrews, Fife, UK.
J Anim Ecol. 2018 May;87(3):623-633. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12806. Epub 2018 Mar 5.
Sexual signals may be acquired or lost over evolutionary time, and are tempered in their exaggeration by natural selection. In the Pacific field cricket, Teleogryllus oceanicus, a mutation ("flatwing") causing loss of the sexual signal, the song, spread in <20 generations in two of three Hawaiian islands where the crickets have been introduced. Flatwing (as well as some normal-wing) males behave as satellites, moving towards and settling near calling males to intercept phonotactic females. From 2005 to 2012, we surveyed crickets and their responses to conspecific song, noting the morph and number of males and females before and after experimental playbacks. The three Hawaiian islands consistently contained different proportions of flatwing crickets, ranging from about 90% of males on Kauai to 50% on Oahu to rare on the Big Island of Hawaii. Flatwing and normal-wing males do not appear to differ in responsiveness to playback, a behaviour that should influence the likelihood of a male encountering a phonotactic female. Instead, male and female crickets from populations in which little to no calling song is perceptible during development tended to seek out callers more readily than crickets that developed in noisier environments. Such increased phonotaxis makes females more likely to find either the caller to which they are responding or to encounter a flatwing (or normal male satellite) that has also been attracted to the song. Our evidence suggests that pre-existing behavioural plasticity (manifest as flexible responses to social-particularly acoustic-information in the environment) is associated with the rapid spread of the flatwing trait. Different social environments select for differential success of flatwing or normal-wing males, which in turn alters the social environment itself.
性信号可能在进化过程中获得或丧失,并且在自然选择的作用下,其夸张程度会受到影响。在太平洋蟋蟀 Teleogryllus oceanicus 中,一种导致性信号(歌声)丧失的突变(“平翅”)在三个夏威夷岛屿中的两个岛屿上,在不到 20 代的时间里迅速传播,这些蟋蟀已经被引入。平翅(以及一些正常翅)雄蟋蟀表现为卫星雄蟋蟀,它们会向鸣叫的雄蟋蟀移动并在其附近定居,以拦截声定向的雌蟋蟀。从 2005 年到 2012 年,我们调查了蟋蟀及其对同种歌声的反应,记录了实验回放前后雄蟋蟀和雌蟋蟀的形态和数量。这三个夏威夷岛屿上平翅蟋蟀的比例始终不同,从考艾岛约 90%的雄性到瓦胡岛的 50%,再到夏威夷大岛的稀有。平翅和正常翅雄蟋蟀似乎在对回放的反应上没有差异,这种行为应该会影响雄蟋蟀遇到声定向雌蟋蟀的可能性。相反,在发育过程中几乎听不到鸣叫歌声的种群中,雄性和雌性蟋蟀比在嘈杂环境中发育的蟋蟀更倾向于寻找鸣叫者。这种增加的声定向使雌性更有可能找到它们正在回应的鸣叫者,或者遇到也被歌声吸引的平翅(或正常雄卫星)蟋蟀。我们的证据表明,预先存在的行为可塑性(表现为对环境中社会信息特别是声音信息的灵活反应)与平翅特征的快速传播有关。不同的社会环境选择了平翅或正常翅雄蟋蟀的不同成功,进而改变了社会环境本身。