Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge, CB2 3EJ, England.
Department of Entomology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, 48824, USA.
Nat Commun. 2018 Sep 28;9(1):3987. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-06513-6.
Although cooperative social interactions within species are considered an important driver of evolutionary change, few studies have experimentally demonstrated that they cause adaptive evolution. Here we address this problem by studying the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides. In this species, parents and larvae work together to obtain nourishment for larvae from the carrion breeding resource: parents feed larvae and larvae also self-feed. We established experimentally evolving populations in which we varied the assistance that parents provided for their offspring and investigated how offspring evolved in response. We show that in populations where parents predictably supplied more care, larval mandibles evolved to be smaller in relation to larval mass, and larvae were correspondingly less self-sufficient. Previous work has shown that antagonistic social interactions can generate escalating evolutionary arms races. Our study shows that cooperative interactions can yield the opposite evolutionary outcome: when one party invests more, the other evolves to invest less.
尽管物种内的合作社会互动被认为是进化变化的重要驱动因素,但很少有研究能够通过实验证明它们会导致适应性进化。在这里,我们通过研究埋葬甲 Nicrophorus vespilloides 来解决这个问题。在这个物种中,父母和幼虫一起合作,从腐肉饲养资源中为幼虫获取营养:父母喂养幼虫,幼虫也会自我喂养。我们建立了实验进化种群,在这些种群中,我们改变了父母为后代提供的帮助,并研究了后代的反应如何进化。我们发现,在父母可预测地提供更多照顾的种群中,幼虫的下颚相对于幼虫的质量变小,幼虫的自我生存能力相应降低。之前的研究表明,对抗性的社会互动会引发不断升级的进化军备竞赛。我们的研究表明,合作互动可能会产生相反的进化结果:当一方投入更多时,另一方会进化到投入更少。