Hodge J R, Song Y, Wightman M A, Milkey A, Tran B, Štajner A, Roberts A S, Hemingson C R, Wainwright P C, Price S A
Department of Biological Sciences, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634, USA.
Department of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Integr Org Biol. 2021 May 13;3(1):obab014. doi: 10.1093/iob/obab014. eCollection 2021.
Whether distantly related organisms evolve similar strategies to meet the demands of a shared ecological niche depends on their evolutionary history and the nature of form-function relationships. In fishes, the visual identification and consumption of microscopic zooplankters, selective zooplanktivory, is a distinct type of foraging often associated with a suite of morphological specializations. Previous work has identified inconsistencies in the trajectory and magnitude of morphological change following transitions to selective zooplanktivory, alluding to the diversity and importance of ancestral effects. Here we investigate whether transitions to selective zooplanktivory have influenced the morphological evolution of marine butterflyfishes (family Chaetodontidae), a group of small-prey specialists well known for several types of high-precision benthivory. Using Bayesian ancestral state estimation, we inferred the recent evolution of zooplanktivory among benthivorous ancestors that hunted small invertebrates and browsed by picking or scraping coral polyps. Traits related to the capture of prey appear to be functionally versatile, with little morphological distinction between species with benthivorous and planktivorous foraging modes. In contrast, multiple traits related to prey detection or swimming performance are evolving toward novel, zooplanktivore-specific optima. Despite a relatively short evolutionary history, general morphological indistinctiveness, and evidence of constraint on the evolution of body size, convergent evolution has closed a near significant amount of the morphological distance between zooplanktivorous species. Overall, our findings describe the extent to which the functional demands associated with selective zooplanktivory have led to generalizable morphological features among butterflyfishes and highlight the importance of ancestral effects in shaping patterns of morphological convergence.
亲缘关系较远的生物是否会演化出相似的策略来满足共享生态位的需求,这取决于它们的进化历史以及形态-功能关系的本质。在鱼类中,视觉识别并捕食微小浮游动物,即选择性浮游动物食性,是一种独特的觅食类型,通常与一系列形态特化相关联。先前的研究已经发现,向选择性浮游动物食性转变后,形态变化的轨迹和幅度存在不一致之处,这暗示了祖先效应的多样性和重要性。在此,我们研究向选择性浮游动物食性的转变是否影响了海洋蝴蝶鱼(蝴蝶鱼科)的形态进化,蝴蝶鱼是一类以多种高精度底栖动物食性而闻名的小型猎物专家。通过贝叶斯祖先状态估计,我们推断了在捕食小型无脊椎动物并通过挑选或刮食珊瑚虫进行觅食的底栖动物祖先中,浮游动物食性的近期进化情况。与猎物捕获相关的特征在功能上似乎具有通用性,底栖动物食性和浮游动物食性觅食模式的物种之间在形态上几乎没有区别。相比之下,与猎物检测或游泳性能相关的多个特征正在朝着新颖的、特定于浮游动物食性的最优状态演化。尽管进化历史相对较短、总体形态不明显,且有证据表明体型进化受到限制,但趋同进化已经缩小了浮游动物食性物种之间近显著数量的形态距离。总体而言,我们的研究结果描述了与选择性浮游动物食性相关的功能需求在多大程度上导致了蝴蝶鱼之间可概括的形态特征,并强调了祖先效应在塑造形态趋同模式中的重要性。