Gao Vance Difan, Morley-Fletcher Sara, Maccari Stefania, Vitaterna Martha Hotz, Turek Fred W
UMR 8576 Unité de Glycobiologie Structurale et Fonctionnelle CNRS University of Lille Lille France.
Center for Sleep and Circadian Biology Northwestern University Evanston IL USA.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Sep 18;10(20):11322-11334. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6770. eCollection 2020 Oct.
Competition for resources often contributes strongly to defining an organism's ecological niche. Endogenous biological rhythms are important adaptations to the temporal dimension of niches, but how other organisms influence such temporal niches has not been much studied, and the role of competition in particular has been even less examined. We investigated how interspecific competition and intraspecific competition for resources shape an organism's activity rhythms.To do this, we simulated communities of one or two species in an agent-based model. Individuals in the simulation move according to a circadian activity rhythm and compete for limited resources. Probability of reproduction is proportional to an individual's success in obtaining resources. Offspring may have variance in rhythm parameters, which allow for the population to evolve over time.We demonstrate that when organisms are arrhythmic, one species will always be competitively excluded from the environment, but the existence of activity rhythms allows niche differentiation and indefinite coexistence of the two species. Two species which are initially active at the same phase will differentiate their phase angle of entrainment over time to avoid each other. When only one species is present in an environment, competition within the species strongly selects for niche expansion through arrhythmicity, but the addition of an interspecific competitor facilitates evolution of increased rhythmic amplitude when combined with additional adaptations for temporal specialization. Finally, if individuals preferentially mate with others who are active at similar times of day, then disruptive selection by intraspecific competition can split one population into two reproductively isolated groups separated in activity time.These simulations suggest that biological rhythms are an effective method to temporally differentiate ecological niches and that competition is an important ecological pressure promoting the evolution of rhythms and sleep. This is the first study to use ecological modeling to examine biological rhythms.
对资源的竞争通常在很大程度上有助于界定生物体的生态位。内源性生物节律是对生态位时间维度的重要适应,但其他生物体如何影响这种时间生态位却鲜有研究,尤其是竞争的作用更是很少被考察。我们研究了种间竞争和种内资源竞争如何塑造生物体的活动节律。为此,我们在基于主体的模型中模拟了一个或两个物种的群落。模拟中的个体根据昼夜活动节律移动并竞争有限的资源。繁殖概率与个体获取资源的成功程度成正比。后代在节律参数上可能存在差异,这使得种群能够随时间进化。我们证明,当生物体没有节律时,一个物种总会在竞争中被排除在环境之外,但活动节律的存在允许生态位分化以及两个物种无限期共存。最初在同一阶段活跃的两个物种会随着时间推移使其同步相角分化以避免相互接触。当环境中只存在一个物种时,种内竞争会强烈地选择通过无节律性来实现生态位扩张,但加入种间竞争者后,在结合了对时间特化的额外适应时,会促进节律振幅增加的进化。最后,如果个体优先与在一天中相似时间活跃的其他个体交配,那么种内竞争的分裂选择可以将一个种群分裂为在活动时间上分离的两个生殖隔离群体。这些模拟表明,生物节律是在时间上区分生态位的有效方法,竞争是促进节律和睡眠进化的重要生态压力。这是第一项使用生态建模来研究生物节律的研究。