Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
Illinois Natural History Survey, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2020 Oct;89(10):2235-2245. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13285. Epub 2020 Jul 7.
Evolutionary ecologists have long been interested in the adaptive significance of morphological traits across stages of animal life. In some cases, traits that are not adaptive in one life stage may be adaptive in a subsequent stage. As such, morphological traits may generate important carryover effects, whereby conditions experienced during one life-history stage influence fitness during subsequent stages. Carryover effects are particularly relevant in young animals, as early life stages are thought to be critical with respect to animal life-history evolution and population dynamics. In songbirds, pre- to post-fledging carryover effects operating within species may be critical for survival and shape life histories among species, but remain poorly understood. Among potential songbird traits, wing development and its associated flight ability may be the most important for post-fledging survival. Thus, to assess the adaptive significance of wing development for juvenile songbirds under Arnold's (Integrative and Comparative Biology, 23, 1983, 347) classic performance-morphology-fitness paradigm, we tested for pre- to post-fledging carryover effects among 20 coexisting species (nine focal species) of an avian community in east-central Illinois, USA. We found evidence for pre- to post-fledging carryover effects of wing development in all species, by which individuals with less developed wings exhibited poorer flight ability and experienced higher rates of mortality after fledging. Furthermore, our findings suggest that carryover effects operating at the species level ultimately help shape patterns of life-history variation among species. Specifically, we found that species with higher rates of nest predation had shorter nestling periods, fledged young with less developed wings and exhibited higher rates of post-fledging mortality. Our results highlight the adaptive significance of wing development as a key factor generating pre- to post-fledging carryover effects among songbirds, and demonstrate how morphological traits, locomotor performance, and age-specific survival may trade-off and interact across juvenile life stages to shape animal life histories.
进化生态学家长期以来一直对动物生命各个阶段的形态特征的适应意义感兴趣。在某些情况下,一个生命阶段不适应的特征在随后的阶段可能是适应的。因此,形态特征可能会产生重要的延续效应,即在一个生命史阶段经历的条件会影响随后阶段的适应性。延续效应在幼小动物中尤为重要,因为早期生命阶段被认为是动物生命史进化和种群动态的关键。在鸣禽中,种内的预离巢到离巢后的延续效应可能对生存至关重要,并塑造物种的生命史,但仍知之甚少。在潜在的鸣禽特征中,翅膀发育及其相关的飞行能力可能对离巢后的生存最重要。因此,为了根据阿诺德(《综合与比较生物学》,23,1983,347)经典的表现-形态-适应性范式评估翅膀发育对幼年鸣禽的适应性意义,我们在美国伊利诺伊州中东部的一个鸟类群落中测试了 20 个共存物种(9 个焦点物种)之间的预离巢到离巢后的延续效应。我们发现,所有物种的翅膀发育都存在预离巢到离巢后的延续效应,翅膀发育较差的个体表现出较差的飞行能力,并在离巢后死亡率较高。此外,我们的研究结果表明,种内的延续效应最终有助于塑造物种间生命史变异的模式。具体来说,我们发现巢捕食率较高的物种具有较短的育雏期、翅膀发育较差的离巢幼鸟和较高的离巢后死亡率。我们的研究结果强调了翅膀发育作为产生鸣禽预离巢到离巢后延续效应的关键因素的适应意义,并表明形态特征、运动表现和特定年龄的存活率如何在幼体生命阶段相互权衡和相互作用,从而塑造动物的生命史。