Wednesday, June 10, 2009
How fast can evolution take place? In
just a few years, according to a new study on guppies led by UC Riverside's
Swanne Gordon, a graduate student in biology.
Gordon and her colleagues
studied guppies — small fresh-water fish biologists have studied for long — from
the Yarra River, Trinidad. They introduced the guppies into the nearby Damier
River, in a section above a barrier waterfall that excluded all predators. The
guppies and their descendents also colonized the lower portion of the stream,
below the barrier waterfall, that contained natural predators.
Eight
years later (less than 30 guppy generations), the researchers found that the
guppies in the low-predation environment above the barrier waterfall had adapted
to their new environment by producing larger and fewer offspring with each
reproductive cycle. No such adaptation was seen in the guppies that colonized
the high-predation environment below the barrier waterfall.
"High-predation females invest more resources into current reproduction
because a high rate of mortality, driven by predators, means these females may
not get another chance to reproduce," explained Gordon, who works in the lab of
David Reznick, a professor of biology. "Low-predation females, on the other
hand, produce larger embryos because the larger babies are more competitive in
the resource-limited environments typical of low-predation sites. Moreover,
low-predation females produce fewer embryos not only because they have larger
embryos but also because they invest fewer resources in current reproduction."
Study results appear in the July issue of The American Naturalist.
Natural guppy populations can be divided into two basic types.
High-predation populations are usually found in the downstream reaches of
rivers, where they coexist with predatory fishes that have strong effects on
guppy demographics. Low-predation populations are typically found in upstream
tributaries above barrier waterfalls, where strong predatory fishes are absent.
Researchers have found that this broad contrast in predation regime has driven
the evolution of many adaptive differences between the two guppy types in color,
morphology, behavior, and life history.
Gordon's research team performed
a second experiment to measure how well adapted to survival the new population
of guppies were. To this end, they introduced two new sets of guppies, one from
a portion of the Yarra River that contained predators and one from a
predator-free tributary to the Yarra River into the high-and low-predation
environments in the Damier River.
They found that the resident, locally
adapted guppies were significantly more likely to survive a four-week time
period than the guppies from the two sites on the Yarra River. This was
especially true for juveniles. The adapted population of juveniles showed a
54-59 percent increase in survival rate compared to their counterparts from the
newly introduced group.
"This shows that adaptive change can improve
survival rates after fewer than ten years in a new environment," Gordon said.
"It shows, too, that evolution might sometimes influence population dynamics in
the face of environmental change."
###
University of California
- Riverside
Higher life forms evolve slower than primitive species.
The guppies are just a evolve variants that can interbreed with the congener species.