Xixuan Li, Ning Li, Dandan Yao, Yu Liu, Ying Song, Dawei Wang, Zhiyong Feng, Xiaohui Liu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
How organisms respond to complex environments is one of the unsolved problems in ecology. Life history patterns of a species provide essential information on how different populations may respond and adapt to environmental changes. Compared to typical seasonal breeders, which have limited distributions, the worldwide distribution of brown rats (Rattus norvegicus) across highly complex and divergent habitats suggests they exhibit exceptional adaptiveness. However, the difference in physiological mechanisms by which brown rats respond and adapt to markedly different environments is seldom investigated. Here, we reveal a significant divergence in reproductive seasonality and environmental responses between two brown rat subspecies: one subspecies, R. n. caraco, lives in the temperate zone, and another subspecies, R. n. norvegicus, lives in the subtropical region. Although R. n. caraco displayed a significantly higher reproductive seasonality than R. n. norvegicus, both subspecies adapted to sub-optimal breeding conditions mainly by regulating the seminal vesicle rather than testis development. Especially in responding to severe winter conditions in high-latitude regions, bodyweight-dependent recovery of testicular development in adults enables R. n. caraco to initiate reproduction more rapidly when conditions are suited. These findings elucidate a regulatory process of how brown rats live as opportunistic breeders by benefiting from enhanced semen production.
生物如何应对复杂的环境是生态学中尚未解决的问题之一。物种的生活史模式为不同种群如何应对和适应环境变化提供了重要信息。与分布范围有限的典型季节性繁殖动物相比,褐鼠(Rattus norvegicus)在全球范围内分布于高度复杂和多样化的栖息地,这表明它们表现出了非凡的适应能力。然而,人们很少研究褐家鼠对明显不同的环境做出反应和适应的生理机制差异。在这里,我们揭示了两个褐鼠亚种在繁殖季节性和环境反应方面的显著差异:一个亚种 R. n. caraco 生活在温带地区,而另一个亚种 R. n. norvegicus 生活在亚热带地区。虽然R. n. caraco的繁殖季节性明显高于R. n. norvegicus,但两个亚种都主要通过调节精囊而不是睾丸的发育来适应次优的繁殖条件。特别是在应对高纬度地区严酷的冬季条件时,成体睾丸发育的恢复依赖于体重,这使得R. n. caraco能够在条件适宜时更快地开始繁殖。这些发现阐明了褐家鼠如何通过提高精液产量而成为机会主义繁殖者的调节过程。
期刊介绍:
The official journal of the International Society of Zoological Sciences focuses on zoology as an integrative discipline encompassing all aspects of animal life. It presents a broader perspective of many levels of zoological inquiry, both spatial and temporal, and encourages cooperation between zoology and other disciplines including, but not limited to, physics, computer science, social science, ethics, teaching, paleontology, molecular biology, physiology, behavior, ecology and the built environment. It also looks at the animal-human interaction through exploring animal-plant interactions, microbe/pathogen effects and global changes on the environment and human society.
Integrative topics of greatest interest to INZ include:
(1) Animals & climate change
(2) Animals & pollution
(3) Animals & infectious diseases
(4) Animals & biological invasions
(5) Animal-plant interactions
(6) Zoogeography & paleontology
(7) Neurons, genes & behavior
(8) Molecular ecology & evolution
(9) Physiological adaptations