Contemporary Body Size Variation of Neotropical Rodents: Environmental and Genetic Effects

IF 1.9 2区 生物学 Q3 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Juan J. Martínez, Lucía V. Sommaro, Noelia S. Vera, Marina B. Chiappero, José Priotto
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Abstract

Body size is a pivotal ecological and evolutionary trait, as it can significantly impact both survival and reproductive success. To understand how human-mediated disturbances influence body size, we conducted a temporal analysis of body mass index (BMI) variations in 2788 individuals spanning six South American rodent species to describe their seasonal and yearly fluctuations between 2005 and 2009. Additionally, we used microsatellite genotyping to estimate genetic pedigrees for individuals from two of these species (Akodon azarae and Calomys musculinus). This enabled us to dissect the phenotypic variation of body size, offering insights into the evolutionary dynamics of that variation. We report significant increments of BMI across years in three species (A. azarae, Calomys venustus, and Oxymycterus rufus). In addition, we observed moderate and similar levels of narrow-sense heritability in A. azarae and C. musculinus, suggesting that part of the variation in this trait is attributable to additive genetic effects. Furthermore, the phenotypic variance, additive genetic variance, and evolvability of BMI were higher in C. musculinus when compared to A. azarae. These findings suggest that BMI in C. musculinus has the potential to exhibit a more rapid response to equivalent selection pressures than in A. azarae. The heritability and evolvability values also imply that the annual changes in BMI may be influenced, at least in part, by natural selection, probably in response to shifting environmental conditions within intensively managed agroecosystems. However, a long-term study is necessary to understand and predict the role of selection in the evolutionary dynamics of body size variation among rodents inhabiting agroecosystems.

Abstract Image

新热带啮齿动物的当代体型变异:环境和遗传效应
体型是一个关键的生态和进化特征,因为它对生存和繁殖成功都有重大影响。为了了解人类活动对体型的影响,我们对南美洲六种啮齿类动物 2788 个个体的体重指数(BMI)变化进行了时间分析,以描述它们在 2005 年至 2009 年间的季节性和年度性波动。此外,我们还使用微卫星基因分型估算了其中两个物种(Akodon azarae 和 Calomys musculinus)个体的遗传血统。这使我们能够剖析体型的表型变异,从而深入了解这种变异的进化动态。我们报告了三个物种(A. azarae、Calomys venustus 和 Oxymycterus rufus)的体重指数在不同年份的显著增长。此外,我们还观察到 A. azarae 和 C. musculinus 的狭义遗传率水平适中且相似,这表明该性状的部分变异可归因于加性遗传效应。此外,与A. azarae相比,C. musculinus的BMI表型方差、加性遗传方差和可演化性更高。这些发现表明,与 A. azarae 相比,C. musculinus 的 BMI 有可能对同等的选择压力做出更快的反应。遗传率和进化率值还意味着,BMI的年度变化可能至少部分受到自然选择的影响,这可能是对集约化管理的农业生态系统中不断变化的环境条件做出的反应。然而,有必要进行长期研究,以了解和预测选择在栖息于农业生态系统的啮齿动物体型变化的进化动态中所起的作用。
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来源期刊
Evolutionary Biology
Evolutionary Biology 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
4.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The aim, scope, and format of Evolutionary Biology will be based on the following principles: Evolutionary Biology will publish original articles and reviews that address issues and subjects of core concern in evolutionary biology. All papers must make original contributions to our understanding of the evolutionary process. The journal will remain true to the original intent of the original series to provide a place for broad syntheses in evolutionary biology. Articles will contribute to this goal by defining the direction of current and future research and by building conceptual links between disciplines. In articles presenting an empirical analysis, the results of these analyses must be integrated within a broader evolutionary framework. Authors are encouraged to submit papers presenting novel conceptual frameworks or major challenges to accepted ideas. While brevity is encouraged, there is no formal restriction on length for major articles. The journal aims to keep the time between original submission and appearance online to within four months and will encourage authors to revise rapidly once a paper has been submitted and deemed acceptable.
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