湍流诱导沙兜幼虫沉降表现出种群内变异。

The Biological bulletin Pub Date : 2018-12-01 Epub Date: 2018-10-04 DOI:10.1086/699827
Jason Hodin, Matthew C Ferner, Gabriel Ng, Brian Gaylord
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引用次数: 6

摘要

沉降——从浮游生物阶段到底栖生物阶段的不可逆转的转变——是许多海岸线生物生命史上的一个关键阶段。我们有理由认为,幼虫在强烈的选择压力下寻找合适的定居栖息地。几十年来的研究主要集中在幼虫用来识别合适栖息地的局部指标上,比如嗅觉线索,表明同种生物的存在或喜欢的食物来源。我们最近的工作表明,居住在海岸的棘皮类动物(海胆、沙美元和近亲)的幼虫可以在短暂接触到它们接近海岸的一个更广泛的指标后安顿下来:流体湍流的增加。在这里,我们证明了这种启动显示了种群内的变化:某些太平洋沙美元(Dendraster excentricus)父母的后代——无论是特定的父亲还是特定的母亲,无论其他父母——对湍流的反应比其他父母更敏感。特别是,在某些情况下,观察到与特定父亲相关的影响,使我们得出结论,这些行为差异可能是遗传的,因此是可遗传的。我们还报告说,接触湍流会导致幼虫暂时沉入海水容器的底部,而以这种方式做出反应的幼虫也更有可能随后定居下来。我们假设了定居时湍流响应的进化分为两步,并提出这些行为的进化起源可能是种群分化和物种形成的驱动力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sand Dollar Larvae Show Within-Population Variation in Their Settlement Induction by Turbulence.

Settlement-the generally irreversible transition from a planktonic phase to a benthic phase-is a critical stage in the life history of many shoreline organisms. It is reasonable to expect that larvae are under intense selection pressure to identify appropriate settlement habitat. Several decades of studies have focused mainly on local indicators that larvae use to identify suitable habitat, such as olfactory cues that indicate the presence of conspecifics or a favored food source. Our recent work has shown that the larvae of seashore-dwelling echinoids (sea urchins, sand dollars, and kin) can be primed to settle following a brief exposure to a broader-scale indicator of their approach to shore: an increase in fluid turbulence. Here we demonstrate that this priming shows within-population variation: the offspring of certain Pacific sand dollar (Dendraster excentricus) parents-both specific fathers and specific mothers, regardless of the other parent-are more responsive to turbulence than others. In particular, the observation of the effect correlating, in some cases, with specific fathers leads us to conclude that these behavioral differences are likely genetic and thus heritable. We also report that turbulence exposure causes larvae to temporarily sink to the bottom of a container of seawater and that larvae that respond in this way are also more likely to subsequently settle. We hypothesize a two-step scenario for the evolution of turbulence responsiveness at settlement and suggest that the evolutionary origin of these behaviors could be a driving force for population differentiation and speciation.

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