Caillaud Marina C, Via Sara
Am Nat. 2000 Dec;156(6):606-621. doi: 10.1086/316991.
Not only is ecological specialization a defining feature of much of Earth's biological diversity, the evolution of specialization may also play a central role in generating diversity by facilitating speciation. To understand how ecological specialization evolves, we must know the particular characters that cause organisms to be specialized. For example, most theories of specialization in herbivorous insects emphasize physiological trade-offs in response to toxic plant chemicals. However, even in herbivores, it is likely that other characters are also involved in resource specialization. Knowing the causes of ecological specialization is also crucial for linking specialization to speciation. When the same character(s) that cause specialization also influence assortative mating, speciation may occur particularly rapidly because specialization and reproductive isolation become coupled in a positive feedback that speeds the evolution of both. Indeed, a central hypothesis in the study of ecological speciation is that specialization in recently diverged taxa may often be due to characters that also produce assortative mating. We test this hypothesis by evaluating the causes of ecological specialization among host-associated populations of an herbivorous insect, the pea aphid (Acyrthosiphon pisum). These populations are highly specialized on different host plants (alfalfa or clover; "alternate hosts"), and the races are partially reproductively isolated. Here, we identify key characters responsible for host plant specialization. Our results suggest that the major proximal determinant of host specialization is the behavioral acceptance of a plant rather than the toxicity of the food source. Pea aphids rapidly assess alfalfa and clover and reject the alternate host based on chemical cues that are perceived before the initiation of feeding. This rapid behavioral rejection of the alternate host by a given race has two consequences. First, unrestrained aphids quickly leave the alternate host and search for other plants. Because pea aphids mate on their host plants, divergence in host acceptance among ecologically specialized races leads to congregation on the favored host. This results in de facto assortative mating when sexual forms are produced in late summer. Second, specialized aphids that are held on the alternate host will not feed in a 7.2-h trial, even in the face of starvation. Thus, a complex trait, behavioral acceptance of a plant as host, influences both reproductive isolation (through host-associated assortative mating) and ecological specialization (because of low nutritional uptake on the alternate host). This dual influence of feeding behavior on both assortative mating and resource specialization is central to the maintenance of these divergent races, and it may also have been involved in their origin.
生态特化不仅是地球上大部分生物多样性的一个决定性特征,特化的进化还可能通过促进物种形成在生物多样性的产生过程中发挥核心作用。为了理解生态特化是如何进化的,我们必须了解导致生物体特化的具体特征。例如,大多数关于食草昆虫特化的理论都强调了对有毒植物化学物质的生理权衡。然而,即使在食草动物中,其他特征可能也与资源特化有关。了解生态特化的原因对于将特化与物种形成联系起来也至关重要。当导致特化的相同特征也影响选型交配时,物种形成可能会特别迅速地发生,因为特化和生殖隔离在一个加速两者进化的正反馈中耦合在一起。事实上,生态物种形成研究中的一个核心假设是,最近分化的类群中的特化通常可能是由于那些也会导致选型交配的特征。我们通过评估一种食草昆虫豌豆蚜(Acyrthosiphon pisum)的宿主相关种群中生态特化的原因来检验这一假设。这些种群高度特化于不同的宿主植物(苜蓿或三叶草;“替代宿主”),并且这些族在生殖上部分隔离。在这里,我们确定了导致宿主植物特化的关键特征。我们的结果表明,宿主特化的主要近端决定因素是对一种植物的行为接受度,而不是食物来源的毒性。豌豆蚜会迅速评估苜蓿和三叶草,并根据在开始取食之前感知到的化学信号拒绝替代宿主。给定的族对替代宿主的这种快速行为拒绝有两个后果。第一,自由的蚜虫会迅速离开替代宿主并寻找其他植物。因为豌豆蚜在其宿主植物上交配,生态特化族之间宿主接受度的差异导致它们聚集在偏好的宿主上。当在夏末产生有性形态时,这实际上导致了选型交配。第二,即使面临饥饿,在替代宿主上的特化蚜虫在7.2小时的试验中也不会取食。因此,一个复杂的特征,即对作为宿主的植物的行为接受度,既影响生殖隔离(通过与宿主相关的选型交配),也影响生态特化(因为在替代宿主上营养摄取低)。取食行为对选型交配和资源特化的这种双重影响对于这些不同族的维持至关重要,并且它可能也参与了它们的起源。