Price Trevor, Lovette Irby J, Bermingham Eldredge, Gibbs H Lisle, Richman Adam D
Am Nat. 2000 Oct;156(4):354-367. doi: 10.1086/303397.
The ecology of the component species of an adaptive radiation is likely to be influenced by the form of the founding ancestor to the radiation, its timing, and rates of speciation and extinction. These historical features complement environmental selection pressures. They imply that, if the history of the species' radiations are very different, ecological communities are unlikely to be completely convergent even when placed in identical environments. We compare the adaptive radiation of the Dendroica warblers of North America with that of the Phylloscopus warblers of Asia. We consider the ecology of the species in two localities where species' diversity is very high (New Hampshire, U.S.A., and Kashmir, India, respectively) and contrast the history of the two radiations on the basis of a molecular (mitochondrial cytochrome b) phylogeny. By comparison with the Phylloscopus, the Dendroica are on average larger and morphologically more similar to one another. Although there is some similarity between the Dendroica and Phylloscopus communities, they differ in foraging behavior and in associations of morphology with ecological variables. The Dendroica likely reflect an early Pliocene radiation and are two to four times younger than the Phylloscopus. They probably had a colorful sexually dichromatic ancestor, implicating sexual selection in the production of the many ecologically similar species. The Phylloscopus are much older and probably had a drab, monomorphic ancestor. Given the difference in ages of the two radiations, it is plausible that the close species' packing of the Dendroica warblers is a transient phenomenon. If this is the case, community structure evolves on the timescales of millions of years. Differences in ancestry and timing of the species' radiations can be related to the different biogeography of the two regions. This implies that the historical imprint on adaptive radiations could be predicted on the basis of the attributes of ancestors and biogeographical context.
适应性辐射中组成物种的生态可能会受到辐射的奠基祖先的形态、其出现时间以及物种形成和灭绝速率的影响。这些历史特征补充了环境选择压力。这意味着,如果物种辐射的历史差异很大,即使处于相同环境中,生态群落也不太可能完全趋同。我们将北美洲的德氏林莺的适应性辐射与亚洲的柳莺的适应性辐射进行了比较。我们考虑了两个物种多样性非常高的地区(分别是美国新罕布什尔州和印度克什米尔)的物种生态,并基于分子(线粒体细胞色素b)系统发育对比了这两种辐射的历史。与柳莺相比,德氏林莺平均体型更大,形态上彼此更相似。尽管德氏林莺和柳莺群落之间存在一些相似之处,但它们在觅食行为以及形态与生态变量的关联方面存在差异。德氏林莺可能反映了上新世早期的辐射,比柳莺年轻两到四倍。它们可能有一个色彩鲜艳的两性异形祖先,这意味着性选择在众多生态相似物种的产生中起作用。柳莺的历史要长得多,可能有一个单调、单态的祖先。鉴于这两种辐射的年龄差异,德氏林莺物种的紧密聚集很可能是一种暂时现象。如果是这样,群落结构会在数百万年的时间尺度上演变。物种辐射的祖先和时间差异可能与这两个地区不同的生物地理学有关。这意味着可以根据祖先的特征和生物地理背景来预测适应性辐射的历史印记。