Repeated evolution of reduced visual investment at the onset of ecological speciation in high-altitude Heliconius butterflies.

IF 3.7 1区 生物学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Evolution Letters Pub Date : 2025-07-09 eCollection Date: 2025-08-01 DOI:10.1093/evlett/qraf017
David F Rivas-Sánchez, Jake Morris, Camilo Salazar, Carolina Pardo-Díaz, Richard M Merrill, Stephen H Montgomery
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Abstract

Colonization of new habitats is typically followed by divergent selection acting on traits that are immediately important for fitness. For example, differences between sensory environments are often associated with variation in sensory traits critical for navigation and foraging. However, the extent to which the initial response to novel sensory conditions is mediated by phenotypic plasticity, and the contribution of sensory or neural adaptation to early species divergence remains unclear. We took advantage of repeated cases of speciation in Heliconius butterflies with independent allopatric distributions in the west of the Colombian and Ecuadorian Andes. Using volumetric brain measurements, we analyzed patterns of investment in primary sensory processing areas of the brain across different localities and habitats. We find that a higher altitude species, Heliconius chestertonii, differs in levels of investment in visual and olfactory brain components compared with its lower altitude relative H. erato venus, mainly attributable to broad-sense heritable variation as inferred from comparisons between wild and common-garden-reared individuals. We provide evidence that this variation is consistent with divergent selection, and compare these shifts with those reported for another high-altitude species, H. himera, and its parapatric lowland counterpart, H. erato cyrbia, to demonstrate parallel reductions in the size of specific optic lobe neuropils. Conversely, for the antennal lobe, we detected different trait shifts in H. himera and H. chestertonii relative to their lowland H. erato neighbors. Overall, our findings add weight to the adaptive potential of neuroanatomical divergence related to sensory processing during early species formation.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

高海拔蝴蝶生态物种形成初期视觉投入减少的重复进化。
新栖息地的殖民化通常伴随着对适应性立即重要的特征的分化选择。例如,感官环境之间的差异通常与导航和觅食至关重要的感官特征的变化有关。然而,对新感觉条件的初始反应在多大程度上是由表型可塑性介导的,以及感觉或神经适应对早期物种分化的贡献尚不清楚。我们利用了在哥伦比亚和厄瓜多尔安第斯山脉西部具有独立异域分布的蝴蝶物种形成的重复案例。利用脑容量测量,我们分析了不同位置和栖息地的大脑初级感觉处理区域的投资模式。我们发现,高海拔物种Heliconius chestertonii在视觉和嗅觉脑成分的投入水平上与其低海拔的相对物种H. erato venus不同,这主要归因于从野生和普通花园饲养的个体之间的比较中推断的广义遗传变异。我们提供的证据表明,这种变化与分化选择是一致的,并将这些变化与另一种高海拔物种H. himera及其准高原低地对应物种H. erato cyrbia的报道进行比较,以证明特定视叶神经粒大小的平行减少。相反,对于触角叶,我们检测到相对于它们的低地邻居H. erato, H. himera和H. chestertonii的特征发生了不同的变化。总的来说,我们的发现增加了早期物种形成过程中与感觉加工相关的神经解剖学差异的适应潜力。
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来源期刊
Evolution Letters
Evolution Letters EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY-
CiteScore
13.00
自引率
2.00%
发文量
35
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Evolution Letters publishes cutting-edge new research in all areas of Evolutionary Biology. Available exclusively online, and entirely open access, Evolution Letters consists of Letters - original pieces of research which form the bulk of papers - and Comments and Opinion - a forum for highlighting timely new research ideas for the evolutionary community.
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