Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520;
Research Division, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, Moss Landing, CA 95039.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Feb 23;118(8). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2005063118.
Predator specialization has often been considered an evolutionary "dead end" due to the constraints associated with the evolution of morphological and functional optimizations throughout the organism. However, in some predators, these changes are localized in separate structures dedicated to prey capture. One of the most extreme cases of this modularity can be observed in siphonophores, a clade of pelagic colonial cnidarians that use tentilla (tentacle side branches armed with nematocysts) exclusively for prey capture. Here we study how siphonophore specialists and generalists evolve, and what morphological changes are associated with these transitions. To answer these questions, we: a) Measured 29 morphological characters of tentacles from 45 siphonophore species, b) mapped these data to a phylogenetic tree, and c) analyzed the evolutionary associations between morphological characters and prey-type data from the literature. Instead of a dead end, we found that siphonophore specialists can evolve into generalists, and that specialists on one prey type have directly evolved into specialists on other prey types. Our results show that siphonophore tentillum morphology has strong evolutionary associations with prey type, and suggest that shifts between prey types are linked to shifts in the morphology, mode of evolution, and evolutionary correlations of tentilla and their nematocysts. The evolutionary history of siphonophore specialization helps build a broader perspective on predatory niche diversification via morphological innovation and evolution. These findings contribute to understanding how specialization and morphological evolution have shaped present-day food webs.
捕食者的特化通常被认为是进化的“死胡同”,因为与整个生物体的形态和功能优化相关的限制。然而,在一些捕食者中,这些变化局限于专门用于捕捉猎物的分离结构中。这种模块化的最极端情况之一可以在管水母类动物中观察到,这是一类浮游群居刺胞动物,它们仅使用触须(带有刺细胞的触手侧分支)来捕捉猎物。在这里,我们研究了管水母类动物的特化种和非特化种如何进化,以及与这些转变相关的形态变化。为了回答这些问题,我们:a)测量了 45 种管水母类动物的 29 个触须形态特征,b)将这些数据映射到一个系统发育树上,c)分析了形态特征与文献中猎物类型数据之间的进化关系。我们发现,特化种可以进化为非特化种,而且一种猎物类型的特化种直接进化为其他猎物类型的特化种。我们的研究结果表明,管水母类动物的触须形态与猎物类型有很强的进化关联,并表明猎物类型之间的转变与触须及其刺细胞的形态、进化模式和进化相关性的转变有关。管水母类动物特化的进化历史有助于构建一个更广泛的视角,即通过形态创新和进化来实现捕食者生态位多样化。这些发现有助于理解特化和形态进化如何塑造当今的食物网。