Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, 47405, USA.
BMC Evol Biol. 2019 Nov 6;19(1):204. doi: 10.1186/s12862-019-1536-7.
Disentangling the selective factors shaping adaptive trait variation is an important but challenging task. Many studies-especially in Drosophila-have documented trait variation along latitudinal or altitudinal clines, but frequently lack resolution about specific environmental gradients that could be causal selective agents, and often do not investigate covariation between traits simultaneously. Here we examined variation in multiple macroecological factors across geographic space and their associations with variation in three physiological traits (desiccation resistance, UV resistance, and pigmentation) at both population and species scales, to address the role of abiotic environment in shaping trait variation.
Using environmental data from collection locations of three North American Drosophila species-D. americana americana, D. americana texana and D. novamexicana-we identified two primary axes of macroecological variation; these differentiated species habitats and were strongly loaded for precipitation and moisture variables. In nine focal populations (three per species) assayed for each trait, we detected significant species-level variation for both desiccation resistance and pigmentation, but not for UV resistance. Species-level trait variation was consistent with differential natural selection imposed by variation in habitat water availability, although patterns of variation differed between desiccation resistance and pigmentation, and we found little evidence for pleiotropy between traits.
Our multi-faceted approach enabled us to identify potential agents of natural selection and examine how they might influence the evolution of multiple traits at different evolutionary scales. Our findings highlight that environmental factors influence functional trait variation in ways that can be complex, and point to the importance of studies that examine these relationships at both population- and species-levels.
解析塑造适应性特征变异的选择因素是一项重要但具有挑战性的任务。许多研究——尤其是在果蝇中——记录了纬度或海拔梯度上的特征变异,但通常缺乏关于可能是因果选择因素的特定环境梯度的分辨率,并且经常不同时调查特征之间的共变关系。 在这里,我们在地理空间上检查了多个宏观生态因素的变化及其与三个生理特征(抗干燥、抗紫外线和色素沉着)在种群和物种尺度上的变化之间的关系,以解决非生物环境在塑造特征变化中的作用。
使用来自三个北美果蝇物种——D. americana americana、D. americana texana 和 D. novamexicana——的采集地点的环境数据,我们确定了两个主要的宏观生态变异轴;这些轴区分了物种的栖息地,并且强烈加载了降水和水分变量。 在为每个特征检测的九个焦点种群(每个物种三个)中,我们检测到抗干燥和色素沉着的显著物种水平变异,但抗紫外线的则没有。 物种水平的特征变异与栖息地水分供应变化引起的自然选择差异一致,尽管抗干燥和色素沉着之间的变异模式不同,并且我们几乎没有发现特征之间多效性的证据。
我们多方面的方法使我们能够识别潜在的自然选择因素,并研究它们如何在不同的进化尺度上影响多个特征的进化。 我们的研究结果表明,环境因素以复杂的方式影响功能特征变异,并指出在种群和物种水平上研究这些关系的重要性。