检索结果(检索关键词为:EVOLUTION;结果共37条)
  • Medina, Iliana; Kilner, Rebecca M.; Langmore, Naomi E.
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2020年第66卷第5期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoaa033
    关键词: COEVOLUTIONARY ARMS-RACE; GEOGRAPHIC-VARIATION; CUCULUS-CANORUS; CUCKOO PARASITISM; HOST-SPECIFICITY; EGG VARIABILITY; COMMON CUCKOO; HAWK MIMICRY; EVOLUTION; REJECTION
    摘要: A fundamental question in biology is how diversity evolves and why some clades are more diverse than others. Phenotypic diversity has often been shown to result from morphological adaptation to different habitats. The role of behavioral interactions as a driver of broadscale phenotypic diversity has received comparatively less attention. Behavioral interactions, however, are a key agent of natural selection. Antagonistic behavioral interactions with predators or with parasites can have significant fitness consequences, and hence act as strong evolutionary forces on the phenotype of species, ultimately generating diversity between species of both victims and exploiters. Avian obligate brood parasites lay their eggs in the nests of other species, their hosts, and this behavioral interaction between hosts and parasites is often considered one of the best examples of coevolution in the natural world. In this review, we use the coevolution between brood parasites and their hosts to illustrate the potential of behavioral interactions to drive evolution of phenotypic diversity at different taxonomic scales. We provide a bridge between behavioral ecology and macroevolution by describing how this interaction has increased avian phenotypic diversity not only in the brood parasitic clades but also in their hosts.

  • Williams, Dana M.; Phat-Tan Nguyen; Chan, Kemal; Krohn, Madeleine; Blumstein, Daniel T.
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2020年第66卷第1期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoz027
    关键词: FLIGHT INITIATION DISTANCE; ANTIPREDATOR BEHAVIOR; PREDATION RISK; BURROWING OWLS; LIFE-HISTORY; URBANIZATION; URBAN; HABITUATION; EVOLUTION; TRAITS
    摘要: Animals living around people may modify their antipredator behavior as a function of proximity to humans, and this response has profound implications for whether or not a population can coexist with humans. We asked whether inland blue-tailed skinks Emoia impar modified their individual antipredator behavior as a function of differential exposure to humans. We conducted multiple consecutive flushes and recorded 2 measures of antipredator response: flight initiation distance (FID), the distance from a threatening stimulus at which an individual flees, and distance fled, the distance an individual fled after a flush. We used a multiple model comparison approach to quantify variation in individual escape behavior across multiple approaches and to test for differences in between-individual variation among populations. We found that individuals tolerated closer approach and fled shorter distances at locations with relatively less human disturbance than at locations with medium and high human disturbance, respectively. In addition, skinks living at high human disturbance sites had less variable FIDs than at low human disturbance sites. Two theories may explain these results. Selection against less favorable phenotypes has reduced behavioral variation in urban habitats and behavioral plasticity allows individuals to flexibly adjust their behavioral patterns in response to human disturbance. These results highlight the importance of studying variation within populations, at the individual level, which may better elucidate the impact that human disturbance has on the behavioral composition of populations.

  • Tichon, Jonathan; Gilchrist, Jason S.; Rotem, Guy; Ward, Paul; Spiegel, Orr
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2020年第66卷第4期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoaa003
    关键词: BROWN HYENA; GROUP-SIZE; EVOLUTION; CARNIVORE; BEHAVIOR; ECOLOGY; ORGANIZATION; DISPERSION; TERRITORY; BRUNNEA
    摘要: Understanding the drivers promoting sociality over solitariness in animal species is imperative for predicting future population trends and informing conservation and management. In this study we investigate the social structure of a desert dwelling population of striped hyena Hyaena hyaena. This species is historically regarded as strictly solitary albeit being the least studied of the extant Hyaenids. Accumulating evidence regarding the frequency of social interactions suggests a revision of striped hyena social structure is required. We hypothesized that striped hyena has a social structure that is more complex than expected for a strictly solitary species. For that end, we deployed an array of camera-traps in a remote desert region in Israel, and compared observed frequencies of striped hyena co-occurrence against null models to test whether hyena co-occurred more than expected by chance. Seven adults were (re)captured by our camera-traps in 49 different instances over 83 tracking days. Of these, 6 exhibited shared space-use around a scarce, isolated perennial water source. Five of them, co-occurred with other hyena (in 3 instances) significantly more frequent than expected by chance (and that timing suggests reproduction is unlikely to be the driving factor). Our findings substantiate evidence of complex social structure in striped hyena, highlight the importance of a scarce resource in space-use and sociality, and provide a baseline for future research of striped hyena social structure. We suggest that similar methods be employed to evaluate social structure in other solitary species to better understand their social dynamics.

  • Martinez-Aquino, Andres; Vidal-Martinez, Victor M.; Sara Ceccarelli, F.; Mendez, Oscar; Soler-Jimenez, Lilia C.; Leopoldina Aguirre-Macedo, M.
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2020年第66卷第3期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoz045
    关键词: POPULATION-GENETICS; HOST-SPECIFICITY; LARVAL CESTODES; EVOLUTION; DNA; PARASITES; PLATYHELMINTHES; TRYPANORHYNCHA; ASSOCIATIONS; COMPLEXITY
    摘要: Despite the diversity and ecological importance of cestodes, there is a paucity of studies on their life stages (i.e., complete lists of intermediate, paratenic, and definitive hosts) and genetic variation. For example, in the Gulf of Mexico (GoM) 98 species of cestodes have been reported to date; however, data on their intraspecific genetic variation and population genetic studies are lacking. The trypanorhynch cestode, Oncomegas wageneri, is found (among other places) off the American Western Atlantic Coast, including the GoM, and has been reported as an adult from stingrays and from several teleost species in its larval form (as plerocerci). This study represents the first report of 2 previously unregistered definitive hosts for O. wageneri, namely the Atlantic sharpnose shark Rhizoprionodon terraenovae and the southern stingray Hypanus americanus. In this work, partial sequences of the 28S (region D1-D2) ribosomal DNA were analyzed to include O. wageneri within an eutetrarhynchoid phylogenetic framework. All O. wageneri individuals (which included plerocerci and adults) were recovered as monophyletic and Oncomegas celatus was identified as the sister species of O. wageneri. Furthermore, population genetic analyses of O. wageneri from the southern GoM were carried out using DNA sequences of the mitochondria! cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (COI) gene, which reflected high genetic variation and a lack of genetic structure among the 9 oceanographic sampling sites. Based on these results, O. wageneri is panmictic in the southern GoM. More extensive sampling along the species entire distribution is necessary to make more accurate inferences of population genetics of O. wageneri.

  • Moreno-Rueda, Gregorio; Requena-Blanco, Abelardo; Zamora-Camacho, Francisco J.; Comas, Mar; Pascual, Guillem
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2020年第66卷第4期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoz062
    关键词: FLUCTUATING ASYMMETRY; LOCOMOTOR PERFORMANCE; NATURAL-SELECTION; ESCAPE SPEED; DEVELOPMENTAL INSTABILITY; MUSCLE MASS; BODY-SIZE; EVOLUTION; TEMPERATURE; PREDATION
    摘要: Predation is one of the main selective forces in nature, frequently selecting potential prey for developing escape strategies. Escape ability is typically influenced by several morphological parameters, such as morphology of the locomotor appendices, muscular capacity, body mass, or fluctuating asymmetry, and may differ between sexes and age classes. In this study, we tested the relationship among these variables and jumping performance in 712 Iberian green frogs Pelophylax perezi from an urban population. The results suggest that the main determinant of jumping capacity was body size (explaining 48% of variance). Larger frogs jumped farther, but jumping performance reached an asymptote for the largest frogs. Once controlled by structural body size, the heaviest frogs jumped shorter distances, suggesting a trade-off between fat storage and jumping performance. Relative hind limb length also determined a small but significant percentage of variance (2.4%) in jumping performance-that is, the longer the hind limbs, the greater the jumping capacity. Juveniles had relatively shorter and less muscular hind limbs than adults (for a given body size), and their jumping performance was poorer. In our study population, the hind limbs of the frogs were very symmetrical, and we found no effect of fluctuating asymmetry on jumping performance. Therefore, our study provides evidence that jumping performance in frogs is not only affected by body size, but also by body mass and hind limb length, and differ between age classes.