Mühlenhaupt Max, Baxter-Gilbert James, Makhubo Buyisile G, Riley Julia L, Measey John
Department of Biology, Chemistry, Pharmacy, Institute of Biology, Freie Universität Berlin, Königin-Luise-Str. 1-3, 14195 Berlin, Germany.
Centre for Invasion Biology, Department of Botany and Zoology, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, Western Cape 7600 South Africa.
Behav Ecol Sociobiol. 2022;76(1):11. doi: 10.1007/s00265-021-03121-1. Epub 2022 Jan 5.
Animals are increasingly challenged to respond to novel or rapidly changing habitats due to urbanization and/or displacement outside their native range by humans. Behavioral differences, such as increased boldness (i.e., propensity for risk-taking), are often observed in animals persisting in novel environments; however, in many cases, it is unclear how these differences arise (e.g., through developmental plasticity or evolution) or when they arise (i.e., at what age or developmental stage). In the Guttural Toad (), adult urban toads from both native and invasive ranges are bolder than conspecifics in natural habitats. Here, we reared Guttural Toad tadpoles in a common garden experiment, and tested for innate differences in boldness across their development and between individuals whose parents and lineage came from rural-native, urban-native, and urban-invasive localities (i.e., origin populations). Tadpoles did not differ in their boldness or in how their boldness changed over ontogeny based on their origin populations. In general, tadpoles typically became less bold as they aged, irrespective of origin population. Our findings indicate that differences in boldness in free-living adult Guttural Toads are not innate in the tadpole stage and we discuss three possible mechanisms driving phenotypic divergence in adult boldness for the focus of future research: habitat-dependent developmental effects on tadpole behavior, decoupled evolution between the tadpole and adult stage, and/or behavioral flexibility, learning, or acclimatization during the adult stage.
To determine if animals can persist in urban areas or become invasive outside their native ranges, it is important to understand how they adapt to life in the city. Our study investigates if differences in boldness that have been found in adult Guttural Toads () represent heritable differences that can also be found in early life stages by rearing tadpoles from eggs in a common garden experiment. We did not find any differences in boldness among tadpoles from rural-native, urban-native, and urban-invasive origin populations. Our findings suggest that differences in boldness are not innate and/or that boldness is a behavioral trait that is decoupled between the tadpole and the adult stage.
由于城市化进程和/或人类将动物迁移至其原生范围之外,动物越来越难以应对新的或迅速变化的栖息地。在适应新环境的动物中,常常会观察到行为差异,比如胆量增加(即冒险倾向);然而,在很多情况下,尚不清楚这些差异是如何产生的(例如通过发育可塑性或进化),以及何时产生(即在什么年龄或发育阶段)。在喉蟾中,来自原生范围和入侵范围的成年城市蟾蜍比自然栖息地中的同种蟾蜍更大胆。在此,我们在一个共同花园实验中饲养喉蟾蝌蚪,并测试了它们在发育过程中以及来自农村原生、城市原生和城市入侵地区(即起源种群)的个体之间胆量的先天差异。蝌蚪的胆量以及胆量随个体发育的变化情况在不同起源种群之间并无差异。总体而言,无论起源种群如何,蝌蚪通常随着年龄增长而变得不那么大胆。我们的研究结果表明,自由生活的成年喉蟾的胆量差异在蝌蚪阶段并非先天存在,并且我们讨论了驱动成年胆量表型分化的三种可能机制,以供未来研究关注:栖息地对蝌蚪行为的发育影响、蝌蚪阶段与成年阶段之间进化的解耦,以及/或者成年阶段的行为灵活性、学习或适应。
为了确定动物能否在城市地区生存或在其原生范围之外成为入侵物种,了解它们如何适应城市生活很重要。我们的研究通过在一个共同花园实验中孵化蝌蚪来调查成年喉蟾中发现的胆量差异是否代表可在生命早期阶段发现的遗传差异。我们未发现来自农村原生、城市原生和城市入侵起源种群的蝌蚪在胆量上存在任何差异。我们的研究结果表明,胆量差异并非先天存在,和/或胆量是一种在蝌蚪阶段与成年阶段之间解耦的行为特征。