Aquatic Ecology Unit, Ecology Building, Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
School of Bioscience, University of Skövde, Skövde, Sweden.
J Evol Biol. 2021 Oct;34(10):1554-1567. doi: 10.1111/jeb.13918. Epub 2021 Sep 12.
Predation risk is often invoked to explain variation in stress responses. Yet, the answers to several key questions remain elusive, including the following: (1) how predation risk influences the evolution of stress phenotypes, (2) the relative importance of environmental versus genetic factors in stress reactivity and (3) sexual dimorphism in stress physiology. To address these questions, we explored variation in stress reactivity (ventilation frequency) in a post-Pleistocene radiation of live-bearing fish, where Bahamas mosquitofish (Gambusia hubbsi) inhabit isolated blue holes that differ in predation risk. Individuals of populations coexisting with predators exhibited similar, relatively low stress reactivity as compared to low-predation populations. We suggest that this dampened stress reactivity has evolved to reduce energy expenditure in environments with frequent and intense stressors, such as piscivorous fish. Importantly, the magnitude of stress responses exhibited by fish from high-predation sites in the wild changed very little after two generations of laboratory rearing in the absence of predators. By comparison, low-predation populations exhibited greater among-population variation and larger changes subsequent to laboratory rearing. These low-predation populations appear to have evolved more dampened stress responses in blue holes with lower food availability. Moreover, females showed a lower ventilation frequency, and this sexual dimorphism was stronger in high-predation populations. This may reflect a greater premium placed on energy efficiency in live-bearing females, especially under high-predation risk where females show higher fecundities. Altogether, by demonstrating parallel adaptive divergence in stress reactivity, we highlight how energetic trade-offs may mould the evolution of the vertebrate stress response under varying predation risk and resource availability.
捕食风险通常被用来解释应激反应的变化。然而,仍有几个关键问题尚未解决,包括以下几点:(1) 捕食风险如何影响应激表型的进化;(2) 环境因素和遗传因素在应激反应中的相对重要性;(3) 应激生理学中的性别二态性。为了解决这些问题,我们研究了后生代胎生鱼类辐射中的应激反应(通气频率)的变异性,其中巴哈马蚊鱼(Gambusia hubbsi)栖息在捕食风险不同的孤立蓝洞中。与捕食者共存的种群个体的应激反应与低捕食种群相似,相对较低。我们认为,这种抑制应激反应是为了减少在频繁和强烈的应激源环境中消耗能量,例如食鱼动物。重要的是,来自野外高捕食地点的鱼类在没有捕食者的情况下经过两代实验室繁殖后,其表现出的应激反应幅度变化很小。相比之下,低捕食种群在实验室繁殖后表现出更大的种群间变异性和更大的变化。这些低捕食种群似乎在食物供应较低的蓝洞中进化出了更抑制的应激反应。此外,雌性的通气频率较低,而在高捕食种群中这种性别二态性更强。这可能反映了在高捕食风险下,尤其是在高捕食风险下,产卵的雌性更注重能量效率,因为在高捕食风险下,雌性的繁殖力更高。总之,通过证明应激反应的平行适应性趋同,我们强调了在不同的捕食风险和资源可用性下,能量权衡如何塑造脊椎动物应激反应的进化。