Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Department of Biosciences, Durham University, Durham, UK.
Ecol Lett. 2020 Feb;23(2):221-230. doi: 10.1111/ele.13395. Epub 2019 Nov 15.
Many interspecifically territorial species interfere with each other reproductively, and in some cases, aggression towards heterospecifics may be an adaptive response to interspecific mate competition. This hypothesis was recently formalised in an agonistic character displacement (ACD) model which predicts that species should evolve to defend territories against heterospecific rivals above a threshold level of reproductive interference. To test this prediction, we parameterised the model with field estimates of reproductive interference for 32 sympatric damselfly populations and ran evolutionary simulations. Asymmetries in reproductive interference made the outcome inherently unpredictable in some cases, but 80% of the model's stable outcomes matched levels of heterospecific aggression in the field, significantly exceeding chance expectations. In addition to bolstering the evidence for ACD, this paper introduces a new, predictive approach to testing character displacement theory that, if applied to other systems, could help in resolving long-standing questions about the importance of character displacement processes in nature.
许多种间领域性物种会互相干扰生殖,在某些情况下,对异性种的攻击可能是一种适应对策,以应对种间的配偶竞争。这个假说最近被形式化在一个竞争性格分歧(ACD)模型中,该模型预测物种应该进化以抵御异性竞争对手的干扰,而这种干扰要超过生殖干扰的阈值水平。为了检验这个预测,我们用 32 个同域性蜻蜓种群的生殖干扰的实地估计值来参数化这个模型,并进行了进化模拟。在某些情况下,生殖干扰的不对称性使得结果本质上是不可预测的,但模型的 80%的稳定结果与实地的异性种攻击水平相匹配,显著超过了随机预期。除了支持 ACD 的证据外,本文还介绍了一种新的、可预测的测试性格分歧理论的方法,如果应用于其他系统,可能有助于解决关于性格分歧过程在自然界中的重要性的长期存在的问题。