Reyes-Corral Winer Daniel, Carvajal-Endara Sofia, Hetherington-Rauth Molly, Chaves Jaime A, Grant Peter R, Grant B Rosemary, Hendry Andrew P, Johnson Marc T J
Department of Biology and Redpath Museum McGill University Montréal Québec Canada.
Centro de Investigación en Biodiversidad y Cambio Climático (BioCamb), Ingeniería en Biodiversidad y Recursos Genéticos, Facultad de Ciencias del Medio Ambiente Universidad Tecnológica Indoamérica Quito Ecuador.
Ecol Evol. 2023 Mar 22;13(3):e9766. doi: 10.1002/ece3.9766. eCollection 2023 Mar.
Island systems have long served as a model for evolutionary processes due to their unique species interactions. Many studies of the evolution of species interactions on islands have focused on endemic taxa. Fewer studies have focused on how antagonistic and mutualistic interactions shape the phenotypic divergence of widespread nonendemic species living on islands. We used the widespread plant (Zygophyllaceae) to study phenotypic divergence in traits that mediate antagonistic interactions with vertebrate granivores (birds) and mutualistic interactions with pollinators, including how this is explained by bioclimatic variables. We used both herbarium specimens and field-collected samples to compare phenotypic divergence between continental and island populations. Fruits from island populations were larger than on continents, but the presence of lower spines on mericarps was less frequent on islands. The presence of spines was largely explained by environmental variation among islands. Petal length was on average 9% smaller on island than continental populations, an effect that was especially accentuated on the Galápagos Islands. Our results show that exhibits phenotypic divergence between island and continental habitats for antagonistic traits (seed defense) and mutualistic traits (floral traits). Furthermore, the evolution of phenotypic traits that mediate antagonistic and mutualistic interactions partially depended on the abiotic characteristics of specific islands. This study shows the potential of using a combination of herbarium and field samples for comparative studies on a globally distributed species to study phenotypic divergence on island habitats.
由于其独特的物种相互作用,岛屿系统长期以来一直是进化过程的模型。许多关于岛屿物种相互作用进化的研究都集中在特有分类群上。较少有研究关注对抗性和互利性相互作用如何塑造生活在岛屿上的广泛分布的非特有物种的表型分化。我们利用广泛分布的植物(蒺藜科)来研究介导与脊椎动物食谷者(鸟类)的对抗性相互作用以及与传粉者的互利性相互作用的性状的表型分化,包括生物气候变量如何解释这一现象。我们使用了标本馆标本和野外采集的样本,以比较大陆种群和岛屿种群之间的表型分化。岛屿种群的果实比大陆上的大,但分果爿上较低刺的存在在岛屿上不太常见。刺的存在很大程度上由岛屿间的环境差异所解释。岛屿上花瓣长度平均比大陆种群小9%,这种影响在加拉帕戈斯群岛尤为明显。我们的结果表明, 在岛屿和大陆栖息地之间,对抗性性状(种子防御)和互利性性状(花部性状)存在表型分化。此外,介导对抗性和互利性相互作用的表型性状的进化部分取决于特定岛屿的非生物特征。这项研究展示了结合使用标本馆和野外样本对全球分布物种进行比较研究以探讨岛屿栖息地表型分化的潜力。