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日本独角仙(Trypoxylus dichotomus)的角长和举力的进化。

Evolution of horn length and lifting strength in the Japanese rhinoceros beetle Trypoxylus dichotomus.

机构信息

Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.

Graduate School of Sciences and Technology for Innovation, Yamaguchi University, 1677-1 Yoshida, Yamaguchi 753-8511, Japan.

出版信息

Curr Biol. 2023 Oct 23;33(20):4285-4297.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.08.066. Epub 2023 Sep 20.

Abstract

What limits the size of nature's most extreme structures? For weapons like beetle horns, one possibility is a tradeoff associated with mechanical levers: as the output arm of the lever system-the beetle horn-gets longer, it also gets weaker. This "paradox of the weakening combatant" could offset reproductive advantages of additional increases in weapon size. However, in contemporary populations of most heavily weaponed species, males with the longest weapons also tend to be the strongest, presumably because selection drove the evolution of compensatory changes to these lever systems that ameliorated the force reductions of increased weapon size. Therefore, we test for biomechanical limits by reconstructing the stages of weapon evolution, exploring whether initial increases in weapon length first led to reductions in weapon force generation that were later ameliorated through the evolution of mechanisms of mechanical compensation. We describe phylogeographic relationships among populations of a rhinoceros beetle and show that the "pitchfork" shaped head horn likely increased in length independently in the northern and southern radiations of beetles. Both increases in horn length were associated with dramatic reductions to horn lifting strength-compelling evidence for the paradox of the weakening combatant-and these initial reductions to horn strength were later ameliorated in some populations through reductions to horn length or through increases in head height (the input arm for the horn lever system). Our results reveal an exciting geographic mosaic of weapon size, weapon force, and mechanical compensation, shedding light on larger questions pertaining to the evolution of extreme structures.

摘要

是什么限制了自然界中最极端结构的大小?对于像甲虫角这样的武器,有一种可能性是与机械杠杆相关的权衡:作为杠杆系统的输出臂——甲虫角——变得越长,它也变得越弱。这种“弱化战斗者的悖论”可能会抵消武器尺寸额外增加的生殖优势。然而,在大多数武器化物种的当代种群中,武器最长的雄性往往也是最强壮的,这大概是因为选择驱动了这些杠杆系统的补偿性进化变化,减轻了增加武器尺寸带来的力量降低。因此,我们通过重建武器进化的阶段来检验生物力学限制,探索武器长度的最初增加是否首先导致了武器力量生成的减少,而这些减少后来通过机械补偿机制的进化得到了缓解。我们描述了一种犀角甲虫种群的系统地理关系,并表明“叉形”头角很可能在甲虫的北部和南部辐射中独立地增加了长度。角长度的增加都与角提升强度的显著降低有关——这是弱化战斗者悖论的有力证据——而这些角强度的最初降低在一些种群中后来通过角长度的降低或头部高度的增加(角杠杆系统的输入臂)得到了缓解。我们的研究结果揭示了一个令人兴奋的武器大小、武器力量和机械补偿的地理镶嵌模式,为与极端结构进化相关的更大问题提供了线索。

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