Centre for Ecology & Conservation, School of Biosciences, University of Exeter, Penryn, UK.
Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health & Comparative Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
J Evol Biol. 2021 Oct;34(10):1624-1636. doi: 10.1111/jeb.13911. Epub 2021 Aug 20.
Understanding how species can thrive in a range of environments is a central challenge for evolutionary ecology. There is strong evidence for local adaptation along large-scale ecological clines in insects. However, potential adaptation among neighbouring populations differing in their environment has been studied much less. We used RAD sequencing to quantify genetic divergence and clustering of ten populations of the field cricket Gryllus campestris in the Cantabrian Mountains of northern Spain, and an outgroup on the inland plain. Our populations were chosen to represent replicate high and low altitude habitats. We identified genetic clusters that include both high and low altitude populations indicating that the two habitat types do not hold ancestrally distinct lineages. Using common-garden rearing experiments to remove environmental effects, we found evidence for differences between high and low altitude populations in physiological and life-history traits. As predicted by the local adaptation hypothesis, crickets with parents from cooler (high altitude) populations recovered from periods of extreme cooling more rapidly than those with parents from warmer (low altitude) populations. Growth rates also differed between offspring from high and low altitude populations. However, contrary to our prediction that crickets from high altitudes would grow faster, the most striking difference was that at high temperatures, growth was fastest in individuals from low altitudes. Our findings reveal that populations a few tens of kilometres apart have independently evolved adaptations to their environment. This suggests that local adaptation in a range of traits may be commonplace even in mobile invertebrates at scales of a small fraction of species' distributions.
了解物种如何在多种环境中繁衍生息是进化生态学的一个核心挑战。昆虫在大尺度的生态梯度上存在明显的局部适应证据。然而,对于环境不同的相邻种群的潜在适应研究却要少得多。我们使用 RAD 测序技术来量化西班牙北部坎塔布里亚山脉的 10 个田野蟋蟀 Gryllus campestris 种群以及内陆平原的一个外群的遗传分歧和聚类。我们选择的种群代表了高海拔和低海拔的重复栖息地。我们确定了包含高海拔和低海拔种群的遗传聚类,表明这两种生境类型并没有包含具有明显祖先差异的谱系。通过常见的饲养实验来消除环境影响,我们发现高海拔和低海拔种群在生理和生活史特征上存在差异。正如局部适应假说所预测的那样,来自较冷(高海拔)种群的父母的蟋蟀比来自较暖(低海拔)种群的父母的蟋蟀在极端冷却期间恢复得更快。高海拔和低海拔种群的后代的生长率也存在差异。然而,与我们的预测相反,即来自高海拔的蟋蟀生长速度更快,最显著的差异是在高温下,来自低海拔的个体生长速度最快。我们的研究结果表明,相隔几十公里的种群已经独立地进化出了对环境的适应。这表明,即使在分布范围很小的移动无脊椎动物中,许多特征的局部适应可能也很常见。