RESUMEN
Evidence suggests that hurricanes can influence the evolution of organisms, with phenotypic traits involved in adhesion, such as the toepads of arboreal lizards, being particularly susceptible to natural selection imposed by hurricanes. To investigate this idea, we quantified trait variation before and after Hurricanes Irma and Maria (2017) in forest and urban populations of the Puerto Rican lizard Anolis cristatellus. We found that the hurricanes affected toe morphology differently between forest and urban sites. In particular, toepads of the forefeet were longer and narrower in forest, but wider in urban populations, compared to pre-hurricane measures. Toepads of the hind feet were larger in area following the hurricanes. Fore and rear toes increased in length following the hurricane. There were no changes in the number of lamellae scales or lamellae spacing, but lamellae 6-11 of the forefeet shifted proximally following the hurricane. We also measured clinging performance and toe shape. We found that toepad area and toe lengths were stronger predictors of adhesive forces than toepad shape. Our results highlight an interaction between urbanization and hurricanes, demonstrating the importance to consider how urban species will respond to extreme weather events. Additionally, our different results for fore and rear feet highlight the importance of evaluating both of these traits when measuring the morphological response to hurricanes in arboreal lizards.
La evidencia sugiere que los huracanes pueden influir en la evolución de los organismos, rasgos fenotípicos como las almohadillas distales de los lagartos arbóreos, son particularmente susceptibles a la selección natural impuesta por los huracanes. Para investigar esta idea, cuantificamos la variación de las almohadillas distales antes y después de los huracanes Irma y María (2017) en poblaciones de bosques y urbanas de las lagartijas puertorriqueña Anolis cristatellus. Encontramos que los cambios morfológicos luego de los huracanes variaron entre las poblaciones de bosque y urbanas. Para las poblaciones de bosque, las almohadillas de las patas delanteras eran más largas y estrechas luego de las tormentas. Por el contrario, las almohadillas delanteras de las poblaciones urbanas fueron más anchas luego de los huracanes. Las almohadillas de los pies traseros tenían un área más grande en todas las poblaciones luego de los huracanes. Los dedos delanteros y traseros aumentaron de longitud después del huracán. No hubo cambios en el número de escamas en las almohadillas distales ni en el ancho de estas escamas, pero las escamas 611 de las patas delanteras se desplazaron proximalmente después del huracán. También medimos las fuerzas adhesivas producida por las almohadillas distales para contrastar con la morfología de los dedos. Encontramos que el área de las almohadillas distales y la longitud de los dedos fueron los predictores más fuertes de las fuerzas adhesivas. Nuestros resultados destacan una interacción entre la urbanización y los huracanes, lo que demuestra la importancia de considerar cómo responderán las especies urbanas a los eventos climáticos extremos. Además, nuestros diferentes resultados para las patas delanteras y traseras resaltan la importancia de evaluar ambos rasgos al medir la respuesta morfológica a los huracanes en lagartijas arbóreos.
RESUMEN
In recent years, biologists have increasingly recognized that evolutionary change can occur rapidly when natural selection is strong; thus, real-time studies of evolution can be used to test classic evolutionary hypotheses directly. One such hypothesis is that negative interactions between closely related species can drive phenotypic divergence. Such divergence is thought to be ubiquitous, though well-documented cases are surprisingly rare. On small islands in Florida, we found that the lizard Anolis carolinensis moved to higher perches following invasion by Anolis sagrei and, in response, adaptively evolved larger toepads after only 20 generations. These results illustrate that interspecific interactions between closely related species can drive evolutionary change on observable time scales.
Asunto(s)
Evolución Molecular , Variación Genética , Especies Introducidas , Lagartos/genética , Selección Genética , Migración Animal , Animales , Florida , Filogenia , Factores de TiempoRESUMEN
Male intrasexual competition should favour increased male physical prowess. This should in turn result in greater aerobic capacity in males than in females (i.e. sexual dimorphism) and a correlation between sexual dimorphism in aerobic capacity and the strength of sexual selection among species. However, physiological scaling laws predict that aerobic capacity should be lower per unit body mass in larger than in smaller animals, potentially reducing or reversing the sex difference and its association with measures of sexual selection. We used measures of haematocrit and red blood cell (RBC) counts from 45 species of primates to test four predictions related to sexual selection and body mass: (i) on average, males should have higher aerobic capacity than females, (ii) aerobic capacity should be higher in adult than juvenile males, (iii) aerobic capacity should increase with increasing sexual selection, but also that (iv) measures of aerobic capacity should co-vary negatively with body mass. For the first two predictions, we used a phylogenetic paired t-test developed for this study. We found support for predictions (i) and (ii). For prediction (iii), however, we found a negative correlation between the degree of sexual selection and aerobic capacity, which was opposite to our prediction. Prediction (iv) was generally supported. We also investigated whether substrate use, basal metabolic rate and agility influenced physiological measures of oxygen transport, but we found only weak evidence for a correlation between RBC count and agility.
Asunto(s)
Condicionamiento Físico Animal , Primates/fisiología , Caracteres Sexuales , Animales , Femenino , Masculino , Filogenia , Primates/clasificación , Especificidad de la EspecieRESUMEN
The pattern of genetic variances and covariances among characters, summarized in the additive genetic variance-covariance matrix, G, determines how a population will respond to linear natural selection. However, G itself also evolves in response to selection. In particular, we expect that, over time, G will evolve correspondence with the pattern of multivariate nonlinear natural selection. In this study, we substitute the phenotypic variance-covariance matrix (P) for G to determine if the pattern of multivariate nonlinear selection in a natural population of Anolis cristatellus, an arboreal lizard from Puerto Rico, has influenced the evolution of genetic variances and covariances in this species. Although results varied among our estimates of P and fitness, and among our analytic techniques, we find significant evidence for congruence between nonlinear selection and P, suggesting that natural selection may have influenced the evolution of genetic constraint in this species.