Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2023 Jun 28;290(2001):20230627. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2023.0627. Epub 2023 Jun 21.
Body size is a prominent morphological trait which affects many aspects of an organism's life. Although large body size is generally considered to be advantageous, ecologists have wondered about the benefits of being small. Many studies of body size depend on the metabolic theory of ecology since body size is an irremovable part of an organism's energy budget. Body size is also a spatial quantity and therefore is linked to spatial processes. Here, I show that competition for space leads to a benefit of being small and hence selects for increasingly smaller body size. I build a deterministic population dynamics model and a stochastic model of birth, death and dispersal in a population of individuals with two different body sizes and show that only the smaller individuals survive. I also extend the population dynamics model to continuously varying body sizes and include a stabilizing natural selection for an intermediate body size. I find that the intrinsic advantage of smaller body size in competition for space can only be overcome when natural selection for a large body size is sufficiently strong. Overall, my results point to a novel benefit of being small.
体型是一个显著的形态特征,它影响着生物体生活的许多方面。尽管大体型通常被认为是有利的,但生态学家一直想知道小体型的好处。许多关于体型的研究都依赖于生态学的代谢理论,因为体型是生物体能量预算中不可改变的一部分。体型也是一种空间数量,因此与空间过程有关。在这里,我表明,对空间的竞争导致了小体型的优势,从而选择了体型越来越小的个体。我构建了一个确定性的种群动力学模型和一个具有两种不同体型的个体的出生、死亡和扩散的随机模型,并表明只有较小的个体能够存活。我还将种群动力学模型扩展到连续变化的体型,并包括对中间体型的稳定自然选择。我发现,只有当对大体型的自然选择足够强时,体型较小的内在竞争优势才会被克服。总的来说,我的研究结果指出了小体型的一个新的优势。