检索结果(检索关键词为:EVOLUTION;结果共49条)
  • Sun, Congnan; Zhang, Chunmian; Lucas, Jeffrey R.; Gu, Hao; Feng, Jiang; Jiang, Tinglei
    Integrative Zoology 2022年第17卷第5期 DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12545
    关键词: SONG PERFORMANCE; BIRD SONG; SIGNAL; AGE; EVOLUTION; COMMUNICATION; CONSISTENCY; GROWTH; CALLS; SIZE
    摘要: Signals containing parameter trade-offs are likely to be honest indicators of signaler quality because they are difficult to produce. Signals with a trill-rate/bandwidth trade-off have been described for many songbird species, one mouse, and one non-human primate species. However, there were no reports about whether there is a vocal performance trade-off in social calls of bats. This study investigated (1) a possible vocal performance trade-off in territorial calls of male Great Himalayan leaf-nosed bats, Hipposideros armiger, recorded from 9 locations in south China, and (2) the relationships between vocal performance (vocal deviation and consistency) and caller's quality (body mass) to determine whether vocal performance honestly indicates a caller's quality. Vocal deviation measures the deviation of a call relative to an extreme call and vocal consistency measures the spectral consistency across a string of syllables. Our results showed a significant negative correlation between syllable repetition rate and frequency bandwidth, suggesting a vocal performance trade-off similar to the one in songbirds. Further, there was a significant negative relationship between body mass and vocal deviation, but no significant correlation between body mass and vocal consistency. This study provides the first empirical evidence for a vocal performance trade-off of social calls in bats, and the potential for the level of performance to indicate caller quality.

  • Ramirez-Francel, Leidy Azucena; Garcia-Herrera, Leidy Viviana; Losada-Prado, Sergio; Reinoso-Florez, Gladys; Sanchez-Hernandez, Alfonso; Estrada-Villegas, Sergio; Lim, Burton K.; Guevara, Giovany
    Integrative Zoology 2022年第17卷第1期 DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12552
    关键词: FREE-TAILED BATS; NECTAR-FEEDING BATS; INSECTIVOROUS BATS; FRUGIVOROUS BATS; SEED DISPERSAL; RAIN-FOREST; FLYING-FOX; POLLINATION; DIET; EVOLUTION
    摘要: Bats play crucial ecosystem services as seed dispersers, pollinators, controllers of insects, and nutrient recyclers. However, there has not been a thorough global review evaluating these roles in bats across all biogeographical regions of the world. We reviewed the literature published during the last two decades and identified 283 relevant studies: 78 dealt with the control of potential insect pests by bats, 80 related to the suppression of other arthropods, 60 on the dispersal of native or endemic seeds, 11 dealt with the dispersal of seeds of introduced plants, 29 on the pollination of native or endemic plants, 1 study on pollination of introduced plants, and 24 on the use of guano as fertilizer. Our literature search showed that queries combining the terms seed dispersal, insectivorous bats, nectarivorous bats, use of guano, and ecosystem services returned 577 studies, but half were experimental in nature. We found that the evaluation of ecosystem services by bats has been mostly conducted in the Neotropical and Palearctic regions. To detect differences across relevant studies, and to explain trends in the study of ecosystem services provided by bats, we performed generalized linear mixed models (GLMM) fitted with a Poisson distribution to analyze potential differences among sampling methods. We identified 409 bat species that provide ecosystem services, 752 insect species consumed by bats and 549 plant species either dispersed or pollinated by bats. Our review summarizes the importance of conserving bat populations and the ecological services they provide, which is especially important during the current pandemic.

  • Chen, Pan; Chen, Taiyu; Liu, Bin; Zhang, Manyu; Lu, Changhu
    Integrative Zoology 2022年第17卷第1期 DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12573
    关键词: URBAN NOISE; ISLAND POPULATION; BIRD SONG; EVOLUTION; SELECTION; ADAPTATION; RESOURCES; CORDGRASS; MAINLAND; INCREASE
    摘要: Habitat structure has been considered as an important factor affecting the acoustic evolution of birds, and bird songs are increasingly affected by artificial environmental variation. Invasive plants sometimes can dramatically alter native habitats, but the song variation of native songbirds migrating into invaded habitats has received little attention. The invasion of smooth cordgrass Spartina alterniflora in the coastal wetlands of eastern China has drastically altered the vegetation structure and some small passerines have begun to use invaded habitats to breed. In this study, we compared the song type prevalence and the song characteristics of male plain prinia Prinia inornata to identify differences in vocal behavior between native and invaded habitats. We also tested for differences in vocal behavior in relation to singing perch and wind speed variation between different habitats. The results indicated that males of plain prinia in invaded habitats sang shorter songs than those in native habitats and had a lower song diversity. The homogeneous vegetation structure and higher wind speed in invaded habitats likely leads to males changing the traditional perched singing style. The song variation may be related to the founder effect, the alteration of vegetation structure and microclimate in invaded habitats. This finding highlights the need for better understanding the behavioral evolution of native species in the process of adapting to the invaded habitat. In the future, experimental manipulation is needed to ascertain how the invasive plant drove these vocal behavior changes of native songbirds.

  • Xia, Wancai; Zhao, Mei; Wang, Dali; Wang, Fan; Chen, Hua; Liu, Guoqi; Zhu, Lifeng; Li, Dayong
    Integrative Zoology 2022年第17卷第1期 DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12608
    关键词: MONKEYS RHINOPITHECUS-BIETI; TRANSMISSION; EVOLUTION; BEHAVIOR; MALES
    摘要: Multilevel society is one of the most complex social systems in natural ecosystems and is a typical feature among some primates. Given the potential connection between social behavior and gut microbiome composition, the multilevel social system could affect the primate gut microbiome. Here, based on long-term observation (e.g. social unit dynamics, transfer, and behavior), we investigated this potential integrating 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing and behavior data in Yunnan snub-nosed monkeys (Rhinopithecus bieti), which possess a multilevel social group based on one male units (OMUs, each unit with several breeding females and their offspring) and all-male unit (AMU, several bachelor males residing together). We found that the mean unweighted Unifrac distance between adult males from different OMUs was significantly lower than that between adult females from different OMUs (paired Wilcoxon test, P = 0.007). There was no significant difference in the mean unweighted Unifrac distance between females within the same OMU or between females from different OMUs. These findings indicated the potential connection between the defense and invasion of social units and the gut microbiome community in wild Yunnan snub-nosed monkeys. We speculated that the resident males of OMUs displaying a significantly higher similarity in the gut microbial community than that of adult females in separate OMUs might be associated with the sexual differences in their interactions and from previously having cohabitated together in the AMU. Therefore, this study suggested that multilevel societies might have an effect on the gut microbial community in this wild nonhuman primate species.

  • Deme, Gideon Gywa; Hao, Xin; Ma, Liang; Sun, Baojun; Du, Weiguo
    ASIAN HERPETOLOGICAL RESEARCH 2022年第13卷第3期 DOI:10.16373/j.cnki.ahr.210068
    关键词: RELATIVE CLUTCH MASS; BODY-SIZE CLINES; LIFE-HISTORY; TAKYDROMUS-SEPTENTRIONALIS; ALTITUDINAL VARIATION; GEOGRAPHIC-VARIATION; LACERTID LIZARD; BERGMANNS; EVOLUTION; TRAITS
    摘要: Identifying how reproductive strategies such as the trade-off between clutch size versus egg mass vary with elevational gradients is essential for our understanding of life-history evolution. We studied lacertid lizards (Eremias argus) in China, from six populations at different altitudes, to assess elevational variation in reproductive strategy. We found significant between-population variation in maternal body size and clutch mass, but these variations were not explained by elevational differences. However, high-elevation females tended to produce smaller clutches of larger eggs compared with their low-elevation counterparts, demonstrating an elevational change in the trade-off between egg size and number. The egg size-number trade-off is a reproductive strategy that may favor large offspring, better enabling them to survive severe and unpredictable environments found at high elevations.