首页> 外文期刊>Evolution: International Journal of Organic Evolution >Gene flow and ineffective antipredator behavior in a stream-breeding salamander
【24h】

Gene flow and ineffective antipredator behavior in a stream-breeding salamander

机译:流繁殖sal中的基因流和无效的抗捕食者行为

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Predators often feed on prey that show ineffective antipredator behavior. Gene flow among populations may constrain evolution of effective antipredator ability in larvae of the streamside salamander, Ambystoma barbouri, a species that occupies distinctly different habitats with conflicting selection pressures. Some streams are ephemeral, where larvae should be active to feed and reach metamorphosis before stream drying. in contrast, other streams are more permanent and contain pools with predatory fish, where larvae should remain inactive to avoid fish predation. Feeding rates and predator escape behavior were assayed for laboratory-reared larvae from 15 populations. Larval survival was also compared among populations in artificial streams with natural predators. Five populations represented streams subjected to fish predation along a gradient of genetic and geographic isolation from populations without fish; the remaining 10 populations were ephemeral and without fish. Individuals from populations with fish had significantly stronger behavioral responses to fish (i.e., decreased feeding rate associated with the presence of fish and increased escape response) than individuals from fishless populations. Larvae from populations containing fish that were more isolated from fishless populations showed stronger antipredator responses than less isolated populations. Further, larvae from more isolated populations survived longer in the predation experiment, indicating that the behaviors measured were related with survival. These results suggest that gene flow between populations with conflicting selection pressures limits local adaptation in some salamander populations with fish. While previous studies have typically focused on the role of gene flow in pairs of populations, the results of this study suggest that gene flow is acting to swamp local adaptation across several populations. [References: 52]
机译:捕食者经常以反击行为无效的猎物为食。种群之间的基因流动可能会限制河边sal的幼虫有效的抗捕食能力的进化,该by在不同的生境中具有明显的选择压力,而其栖息地却截然不同。某些溪流是短暂的,幼虫应活跃,在溪流干燥前应活跃饲料并达到变态。相比之下,其他溪流则更持久,并包含带有掠食性鱼类的水池,在这种情况下,幼体应保持不活动状态以避免鱼类被捕食。测定了来自15个种群的实验室饲养幼虫的摄食率和捕食者逃逸行为。还比较了天然捕食者在人工流中的幼虫存活率。有五个种群代表了从没有鱼类的种群遗传和地理隔离的梯度上受到鱼类捕食的河流;其余的10个种群是短暂的,没有鱼类。与无鱼种群相比,有鱼种群的个体对鱼类的行为反应明显更强(即与鱼的存在相关的进食速率降低和逃逸反应增加)。与较少鱼类种群相比,来自鱼类种群的幼虫与非鱼类种群之间的隔离程度更高,它们对捕食者的反应更强。此外,来自更多分离种群的幼虫在捕食实验中存活更长的时间,表明所测量的行为与存活有关。这些结果表明,在选择压力相互冲突的种群之间的基因流动限制了某些sal鱼种群的局部适应。尽管以前的研究通常集中于基因流在成对种群中的作用,但这项研究的结果表明,基因流正在淹没几个种群的局部适应性。 [参考:52]

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号