是什么推动了变温动物体型的进化?横跨两栖动物生命之树的全球分析

IF 6.3 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Global Ecology and Biogeography Pub Date : 2023-04-25 DOI:10.1111/geb.13696
Jack V. Johnson, Catherine Finn, Jacinta Guirguis, Luke E. B. Goodyear, Lilly P. Harvey, Ryan Magee, Santiago Ron, Daniel Pincheira-Donoso
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引用次数: 3

摘要

动物体型大尺度模式的出现是广泛的(宏观)生态和进化假设的中心期望。形成这些模式的驱动因素包括气候(如伯格曼规则)、资源可用性(如“资源规则”)、生物地理环境和生态位划分(如适应性辐射)。然而,这些假设通常对体型进化的轨迹做出相反的预测。因此,是否可以确定体型进化的潜在驱动因素仍然是一个悬而未决的问题。在这里,我们采用了最全面的全球两栖动物体型数据集,以解决基于气候因素、生态和生物地理环境预测体型进化模式的多种假设,以确定潜在的驱动因素及其在谱系中的普遍性。位置 全球。时间:现在。两栖动物的主要分类群。方法利用全球7270种(87%)无尾目、无尾目和裸子目的数据集,采用系统发育贝叶斯模型来测试气候、资源可用性、岛屿、海拔、栖息地利用和饮食活动对体型的影响。结果只有气候和海拔对体型模式有影响,且这些过程是特定于种群的。降水和温度的季节性预测了无尾动物的体型变化,而无尾动物的体型随着干旱而增加。然而,这两个驱动因素都不能解释蝾螈体型的变化。在无尾目动物和无尾目动物中,体型随海拔高度的增加而增加,无尾目动物只随海拔中点的升高而增加。平均温度、资源丰度、岛屿、活动时间和生境利用均未发现影响。主要结论降水和温度季节性是影响两栖动物体型变化的主要气候因素。伯格曼规则一直被拒绝,其他替代假设也是如此。我们认为,维持现有的体型宏观生态规则在两栖动物中是不现实的,并在气候变化可以驱动体型变化的新兴假设的背景下讨论了我们的发现。
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What drives the evolution of body size in ectotherms? A global analysis across the amphibian tree of life

Aim

The emergence of large-scale patterns of animal body size is the central expectation of a wide range of (macro)ecological and evolutionary hypotheses. The drivers shaping these patterns include climate (e.g. Bergmann's rule), resource availability (e.g. ‘resource rule’), biogeographic settings and niche partitioning (e.g. adaptive radiation). However, these hypotheses often make opposing predictions about the trajectories of body size evolution. Therefore, whether underlying drivers of body size evolution can be identified remains an open question. Here, we employ the most comprehensive global dataset of body size in amphibians, to address multiple hypotheses that predict patterns of body size evolution based on climatic factors, ecology and biogeographic settings to identify underlying drivers and their generality across lineages.

Location

Global.

Time Period

Present.

Major Taxa Studied

Amphibians.

Methods

Using a global dataset spanning 7270 (>87% of) species of Anura, Caudata and Gymnophiona, we employed phylogenetic Bayesian modelling to test the roles of climate, resource availability, insularity, elevation, habitat use and diel activity on body size.

Results

Only climate and elevation drive body size patterns, and these processes are order-specific. Seasonality in precipitation and in temperature predict body size clines in anurans, whereas caecilian body size increases with aridity. However, neither of these drivers explained variation in salamander body size. In both anurans and caecilians, size increases with elevational range and with midpoint elevation in caecilians only. No effects of mean temperature, resource abundance, insularity, time of activity or habitat use were found.

Main Conclusions

Precipitation and temperature seasonality are the dominant climatic drivers of body size variation in amphibians overall. Bergmann's rule is consistently rejected, and so are other alternative hypotheses. We suggest that the rationale sustaining existing macroecological rules of body size is unrealistic in amphibians and discuss our findings in the context of the emerging hypothesis that climate change can drive body size shifts.

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来源期刊
Global Ecology and Biogeography
Global Ecology and Biogeography 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
12.10
自引率
3.10%
发文量
170
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Global Ecology and Biogeography (GEB) welcomes papers that investigate broad-scale (in space, time and/or taxonomy), general patterns in the organization of ecological systems and assemblages, and the processes that underlie them. In particular, GEB welcomes studies that use macroecological methods, comparative analyses, meta-analyses, reviews, spatial analyses and modelling to arrive at general, conceptual conclusions. Studies in GEB need not be global in spatial extent, but the conclusions and implications of the study must be relevant to ecologists and biogeographers globally, rather than being limited to local areas, or specific taxa. Similarly, GEB is not limited to spatial studies; we are equally interested in the general patterns of nature through time, among taxa (e.g., body sizes, dispersal abilities), through the course of evolution, etc. Further, GEB welcomes papers that investigate general impacts of human activities on ecological systems in accordance with the above criteria.
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