Meyer A, Morrissey J M, Schartl M
Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York, Stony Brook 11794-5245.
Nature. 1994 Apr 7;368(6471):539-42. doi: 10.1038/368539a0.
Darwin believed that sexual selection accounts for the evolution of exaggerated male ornaments, such as the sword-like caudal fin extensions of male fishes of the genus Xiphophorus, that appear detrimental to survival. Swordtails continue to feature prominently in empirical work and theories of sexual selection; the pre-existing bias hypothesis has been offered as an explanation for the evolution of swords in these fishes. Based upon a largely morphological phylogeny, this hypothesis suggests that female preference to mate with sworded males arose in ancestrally swordless species, thus pre-dating the origin of the sword itself and directly driving its evolution. Here we present a molecular phylogeny (based on mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences) of Xiphophorus which differs from the traditional one: it indicates that the sword originated and was lost repeatedly. Our phylogeny suggests that the ancestor of the genus is more likely to have possessed a sword than not, thus questioning the applicability of the pre-existing bias hypothesis as an explanation for the evolution of this sexually selected trait.
达尔文认为,性选择导致了夸张的雄性装饰物的进化,比如剑尾鱼属雄性鱼类的剑状尾鳍延长部分,而这些特征似乎对生存不利。剑尾鱼在性选择的实证研究和理论中一直占据显著地位;先前存在的偏好假说被提出用于解释这些鱼类剑状结构的进化。基于一个主要是形态学的系统发育树,该假说认为,雌性与有剑状结构的雄性交配的偏好出现在祖先没有剑状结构的物种中,因此早于剑状结构本身的起源,并直接推动了其进化。在这里,我们展示了一个剑尾鱼属的分子系统发育树(基于线粒体和核DNA序列),它与传统的系统发育树不同:它表明剑状结构是多次起源并多次消失的。我们的系统发育树表明,该属的祖先更有可能拥有剑状结构,而不是没有,因此质疑了先前存在的偏好假说作为这种性选择特征进化解释的适用性。