Department of Fisheries, Wildlife and Conservation Biology, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, MN 55108, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697-2525, USA. E-mail:
Zool Res. 2023 Jul 18;44(4):808-820. doi: 10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2022.488.
Recent colonization of extreme environments provides unique opportunities to study the early steps of adaptation and the potential for rapid convergent evolution. However, phenotypic shifts during recent colonization may also be due to plasticity in response to changes in the rearing environment. Here, we analyzed a suite of morphological and behavioral traits in paired surface, subterranean, and facultatively subterranean Mexican tetras ( ) from recent introductions in two separate watersheds outside of their native range. We found a variety of phenotypic and behavioral shifts between subterranean and surface populations that are similar to those observed in relatively ancient populations in Mexico. Despite this rapid morphological divergence, we found that most of these trait differences were due to plasticity in response to rearing environments. While most trait assays in common-garden, lab-raised fish indicated that phenotypic shifts in wild fish were the result of plasticity, we also found evidence of genetic control in several traits present in subterranean populations. Interestingly, wall-following behavior, an important subterranean foraging behavior, was greater in lab-born subterranean fish than in lab-born surface fish, suggesting rapid divergence of this trait between subterranean and surface populations. Thus, this study sheds light on the early steps of subterranean evolution, identifies potential rapid behavioral evolution, and suggests that plasticity in traits involving exploratory behavior may facilitate subterranean colonization.
最近对极端环境的殖民化提供了独特的机会来研究适应的早期步骤和快速趋同进化的潜力。然而,最近殖民化过程中的表型变化也可能是由于对饲养环境变化的可塑性反应。在这里,我们分析了来自两个不同流域的最近引入的墨西哥四齿鲀()的一系列形态和行为特征,这些流域位于其原生范围之外。我们发现,地下和地表种群之间存在各种形态和行为上的变化,这些变化与在墨西哥相对古老的种群中观察到的变化相似。尽管存在这种快速的形态分化,但我们发现大多数这些特征差异是由于对饲养环境的可塑性反应所致。虽然在共同养殖、实验室饲养的鱼类中进行的大多数特征测定表明,野生鱼类的表型变化是可塑性的结果,但我们也发现了一些存在于地下种群中的特征的遗传控制的证据。有趣的是,壁追随行为,一种重要的地下觅食行为,在实验室出生的地下鱼类中比在实验室出生的地表鱼类中更为常见,这表明地下和地表种群之间的这种特征快速分化。因此,这项研究揭示了地下进化的早期步骤,确定了潜在的快速行为进化,并表明涉及探索行为的特征的可塑性可能促进地下殖民化。