灵长类动物的共感决定了它们大脑结构的进化

Benjamin Robira, Benoît Perez-Lamarque
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引用次数: 2

摘要

关于动物认知进化的主要假设强调同种动物在影响社会生态环境塑造认知方面的作用。然而,空间往往同时被来自同一生态协会的多个物种所占据。这些同域物种可以竞争食物,从而刺激或阻碍认知。考虑到大脑大小作为认知的代理,我们测试了物种同情是否影响了食果灵长类动物的认知进化。我们首先追溯了食果灵长类谱系之间的共情进化历史。然后,我们在考虑或不考虑物种同情的情况下,拟合了食果灵长类动物几个大脑区域大小进化的系统发育模型。我们发现,用于即时信息处理的整个大脑或大脑区域的进化最适合不考虑同情的模型。相比之下,考虑物种同系性的模型最好地预测了与社会生态环境相互作用的长期记忆相关的大脑区域的进化,它们的大小越高,同系性越小。我们推测,物种的共生关系,通过产生强烈的食物消耗,可能导致资源时空性的过度复杂,从而抵消了高认知能力和/或可能驱动生态位划分和专一化的好处,从而导致更小的大脑区域大小。此外,我们还报道了同属系统中灵长类物种多样化的速度较慢。这一比较研究表明,物种间的共生关系对灵长类动物的进化有重要的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Primate sympatry shapes the evolution of their brain architecture
The main hypotheses on the evolution of animal cognition emphasise the role of conspecifics in affecting the socio-ecological environment shaping cognition. Yet, space is often simultaneously occupied by multiple species from the same ecological guild. These sympatric species can compete for food, which may thereby stimulate or hamper cognition. Considering brain size as a proxy for cognition, we tested whether species sympatry impacted the evolution of cognition in frugivorous primates. We first retraced the evolutionary history of sympatry between frugivorous primate lineages. We then fitted phylogenetic models of the evolution of the size of several brain regions in frugivorous primates, considering or not species sympatry. We found that the evolution of the whole brain or brain regions used in immediate information processing was best fitted with models not considering sympatry. By contrast, models considering species sympatry best predicted the evolution of brain regions related to long-term memory of interactions with the socio-ecological environment, with a decrease in their size the higher the sympatry. We speculate that species sympatry, by generating intense food depletion, might lead to an over-complexification of resource spatiotemporality that counteracts the benefits of high cognitive abilities and/or might drive niche partitioning and specialisation, thereby inducing lower brain region sizes. In addition, we reported that primate species in sympatry diversify more slowly. This comparative study suggests that species sympatry significantly contributes to shaping primate evolution.
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