Cardilini Adam P A, Micallef Sarah, Bishop Valerie R, Sherman Craig D H, Meddle Simone L, Buchanan Katherine L
Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria,
School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Centre for Integrative Ecology (Waurn Ponds Campus), Waurn Ponds, Victoria,
Brain Behav Evol. 2018;92(1-2):63-70. doi: 10.1159/000491672. Epub 2018 Sep 13.
Cognitive traits are predicted to be under intense selection in animals moving into new environments and may determine the success, or otherwise, of dispersal and invasions. In particular, spatial information related to resource distribution is an important determinant of neural development. Spatial information is predicted to vary for invasive species encountering novel environments. However, few studies have tested how cognition or neural development varies intraspecifically within an invasive species. In Australia, the non-native common starling Sturnus vulgaris inhabits a range of habitats that vary in seasonal resource availability and distribution. We aimed to identify variations in the brain mass and hippocampus volume of starlings in Australia related to environmental variation across two substantially different habitat types. Specifically, we predicted variation in brain mass and hippocampal volume in relation to environmental conditions, latitude, and climatic variables. To test this, brain mass and volumes of the hippocampus and two control brain regions (telencephalon and tractus septomesencephalicus) were quantified from starling brains gathered from across the species' range in south eastern Australia. When comparing across an environmental gradient, there was a significant interaction between sex and environment for overall brain mass, with greater sexual dimorphism in brain mass in inland populations compared to those at the coast. There was no significant difference in hippocampal volume in relation to environmental measures (hippocampus volume, n = 17) for either sex. While these data provide no evidence for intraspecific environmental drivers for changes in hippocampus volume in European starlings in Australia, they do suggest that environmental factors contribute to sex differences in brain mass. This study identifies associations between the brain volume of a non-native species and the environment; further work in this area is required to elucidate the mechanisms driving this relationship.
认知特征预计在进入新环境的动物中受到强烈选择,并且可能决定扩散和入侵的成功与否。特别是,与资源分布相关的空间信息是神经发育的重要决定因素。预计入侵物种在遇到新环境时,空间信息会有所不同。然而,很少有研究测试认知或神经发育在入侵物种内部如何种内变化。在澳大利亚,非本地的家八哥(Sturnus vulgaris)栖息在一系列栖息地中,这些栖息地的季节性资源可用性和分布各不相同。我们旨在确定澳大利亚八哥的脑质量和海马体体积与两种截然不同的栖息地类型的环境变化之间的差异。具体而言,我们预测脑质量和海马体体积会因环境条件、纬度和气候变量而有所变化。为了验证这一点,我们从澳大利亚东南部该物种分布范围内收集的八哥大脑中,对脑质量、海马体体积以及两个对照脑区(端脑和隔中脑束)进行了量化。当在环境梯度上进行比较时,总体脑质量在性别和环境之间存在显著交互作用,与沿海种群相比,内陆种群的脑质量存在更大的性别二态性。无论性别,海马体体积与环境指标(海马体体积,n = 17)均无显著差异。虽然这些数据没有为澳大利亚欧洲八哥海马体体积变化的种内环境驱动因素提供证据,但它们确实表明环境因素导致了脑质量的性别差异。这项研究确定了一个非本地物种的脑体积与环境之间的关联;需要在这一领域进一步开展工作,以阐明驱动这种关系的机制。