鸟类的“岛屿法则”:中等体型及其生态学解释

S. Clegg, Ian P. F. Owens
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引用次数: 233

摘要

鸟类是否表现出与哺乳动物不同的岛屿进化模式?哺乳动物遵循“岛屿法则”,大型物种在岛屿上变小,小型物种在岛屿上变大。相比之下,关于鸟类的传统观点是,它们的身体大小不遵循一般的岛屿规则,但大喙有一个岛屿趋势。因此,摄食生态的岛屿转移被广泛认为是岛屿鸟类分化的主要原因。我们用比较的方法来检验这些想法。与传统观点相反,我们没有发现岛屿种群的喙尺寸增加的证据。相反,喙大小和身体大小的变化都遵循“岛屿规则”。我们的结果与传统观点之间的差异是因为之前的分析主要基于雀形目。我们还研究了一些被认为影响岛屿进化的生态因素。正如传统观点所预测的那样,喙大小的变化与摄食生态有关。相比之下,体型的变化与种内竞争和热生态的可能性有关。当我们使用不同的生态因子评分方法,并将我们的分析限制在具有明显形态差异的分类群上时,所有这些结果都是定性不变的。然而,由于各生态因子之间存在较强的共变,我们无法估计各生态因子的相对重要性。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,岛屿规则对鸟类的体型和喙长都是有效的,除了摄食生态外,种内竞争水平和非生物环境的岛屿变化也有作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The ‘island rule’ in birds: medium body size and its ecological explanation
Do birds show a different pattern of insular evolution from mammals? Mammals follow the ‘island rule’, with large–bodied species getting smaller on islands and small–bodied species getting bigger. By contrast, the traditional view on birds is that they follow no general island rule for body size, but that there is an insular trend for large bills. Insular shifts in feeding ecology are, therefore, widely assumed to be the primary cause of divergence in island birds. We use a comparative approach to test these ideas. Contrary to the traditional view, we find no evidence for increased bill size in insular populations. Instead, changes in both bill size and body size obey the ‘island rule’. The differences between our results and the traditional view arise because previous analyses were based largely on passerines. We also investigate some ecological factors that are thought to influence island evolution. As predicted by the traditional view, shifts in bill size are associated with feeding ecology. By contrast, shifts in body size are associated with the potential for intraspecific competition and thermal ecology. All these results remain qualitatively unchanged when we use different methods to score the ecological factors and restrict our analyses to taxa showing pronounced morphological divergence. Because of strong covariation between ecological factors, however, we cannot estimate the relative importance of each ecological factor. Overall, our results show that the island rule is valid for both body size and bill length in birds and that, in addition to feeding ecology, insular shifts in the level of intraspecific competition and the abiotic environment also have a role.
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