School of Life and Environmental Sciences, The University of Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia.
Department of Fish Ecology and Evolution, Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Centre of Ecology, Evolution and Biochemistry, Seestrasse 79, 6047 Kastanienbaum, Switzerland.
Proc Biol Sci. 2020 Nov 11;287(1938):20201964. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2020.1964.
As is common in biological invasions, the rate at which cane toads () have spread across tropical Australia has accelerated through time. Individuals at the invasion front travel further than range-core conspecifics and exhibit distinctive morphologies that may facilitate rapid dispersal. However, the links between these morphological changes and locomotor performance have not been clearly documented. We used raceway trials and high-speed videography to document locomotor traits (e.g. hop distances, heights, velocities, and angles of take-off and landing) of toads from range-core and invasion-front populations. Locomotor performance varied geographically, and this variation in performance was linked to morphological features that have evolved during the toads' Australian invasion. Geographical variation in morphology and locomotor ability was evident not only in wild-caught animals, but also in individuals that had been raised under standardized conditions in captivity. Our data thus support the hypothesis that the cane toad's invasion across Australia has generated rapid evolutionary shifts in dispersal-relevant performance traits, and that these differences in performance are linked to concurrent shifts in morphological traits.
与生物入侵的普遍情况一样,蔗蜍在澳大利亚热带地区的传播速度随着时间的推移而加快。处于入侵前沿的个体比核心种群的个体行进得更远,并且表现出独特的形态,这可能有助于快速扩散。然而,这些形态变化与运动性能之间的联系尚未得到明确记录。我们使用跑道试验和高速录像来记录来自核心种群和入侵前沿种群的蟾蜍的运动特征(例如跳跃距离、高度、速度以及起飞和着陆的角度)。运动性能在地理上存在差异,这种性能的差异与蟾蜍在澳大利亚入侵期间进化的形态特征有关。不仅在野生捕获的动物中,而且在圈养条件下经过标准化饲养的个体中,都可以明显看出形态和运动能力的地理差异。因此,我们的数据支持以下假设:蔗蜍在澳大利亚的入侵导致了与扩散相关的性能特征的快速进化转变,而这些性能差异与形态特征的同时变化有关。