Saturday, 19 December 2020
Monday, 26 October 2020
The Evolution of Migration Routes in Birds and Insects
Consider an archipelago. Island
inhabitants within an archipelago gain in fitness by moving between islands or
between islands and mainland. This is done to exploit regularly changing
conditions. Such behavioural adaptations lead to the evolution of migration
routes. Migration, often over spectacular distances, is well known for many
bird and mammal species. Typically, migration routes follow genetically fixed
compass bearings as shown for birds in Fig. 1d, from (Davies, Krebs, & West, 2012).
Though we usually picture
islands as land surrounded by water, reflection leads to the important generalisation
that essentially all habitats are isolated patches surrounded by inhospitable
terrain. In other words they are islands. Different species have different
ecological requirements, so will perceive different places as habitable islands.
In
this essay I want to consider rain pools. There are many kinds of rain pool but
all are transient habitat islands drying up frequently. When full they are exploited
by a variety of aquatic animals, in prodigious numbers endemic to their kind of
pool. Examples include pools in the foot prints of animals such as elephants,
those in the axils of leaves, in pitcher plants, in tree hollows and on the
surfaces of rocks (McLachlan & Ladle, 2001). It is the last of these, specifically those on
sheets of rock in tropical
FIG. 2. An example of pools
(P1 and P2), near a river (r), flowing over a sheet of rock in
There is quite a lot known
about the ecology of pools on rock surfaces in Africa (hereafter called rock
pools), and the adaptations of the indigenous animals inhabiting them (McLachlan & Ladle, 2001). I here contend that adaptive migration behaviour as
seen in birds can be expected to evolve among the inhabitants of rock pools but
not among the inhabitants of other ephemeral habitats. This is because rock
pools are always to be found in the same place, which is not true of other rain
pools. I return to this point below.
Principal among the
inhabitants of rock pools are aquatic insect larvae that cannot survive the
drying of their home pool. Individuals that manage to reach adulthood before
the home pool dries must migrate to find a pool with water in which to
oviposit. I here consider two such species, both midges in the Genus Chironomus. i.e. C. pulcher and C. imicola.
Note that for rain pool species there is strictly one species in any particular
pool and the association persists, when the pool is full, from year to year and
presumably for thousands, even millions of years. It is worth noting too, that
the genus Chironomus is an African
genus of invaders, quick to exploit new opportunities but poor at competition
with other species (Armitage, Cranston, & Pinder, 1995). In this sense these two rock pools breeding insects
are preadapted (M. J.
West-Eberhard, 1992) p15.
Now for some details: C
pulcher is confined to pools near rivers. Such pools are effectively permanent
because even in the dry season new pools are formed as the river recedes, exposing
new pools full of river water. The pools in Fig 2 are of this kind. During the
rains, pools remote from rivers also fill and provide opportunities for invaders.
It is these remote pools that are exploited by C. imicola. C. pulcher
does not move from the archipelago of near–river pools, which are refuges for
both species in the dry season. Figs. 3 and 4 below show the sampling sites
where the work discussed here were done between 1970 and 2004.
FIG. 3. The study
area, seen from the NW, is indicated by a broken line. It includes a
heterogeneous landscape of rivers (r) and mountains (m) rising to a height of
250m above thinly wooded plains (dark patches are cloud shadows). X indicates
the highest mountain within the study area. The photo was taken from 800m up
Zomba massive. Mulanji massive (M), rising to a height of 2300m above the plain
is barely visible in the far background. C,
FIG. 4. The
distribution of pools inhabited by Chironomus
pulcher (black dots), and those inhabited by Chironomus imicola (red dots), (a) in a dry season and (b) in the
next wet season. Each point represents a single rock pool within the sampling
are shown in Fig. 3. Pools dry at the time of sampling are not shown. Mountains
are represented by contours at 50m intervals. The red arrow shows a predicted
wet season migration route for C. imicola
from river refuges. The principal refuge, measured as number of full pools at
the time of sampling is indicated by a red circle.
I have made the point that
rock pools are different from other rain pools and even different from other
ephemeral insect habitats such as fallen fruit, carrion and the dung of mammals
and that the evolution of migration routes can therefore be predicted for insects
indigenous to rock pools, here C. pulcher
and C. imicola. How might the
evolution of migration routes have originated for these two species? The
proximate requirement is that migration direction is genetically determined and
that migration direction varies with the population. Individuals with migration
direction resulting in the successful location of appropriate remote pools pass
on their migration direction genes to the next generation, thus leading to the
evolution of migration routes. Note that I am not here proposing adaptive phenotypic
flexibility (M. J. West-Eberhard, 2003), but well understood genetically fixed phenotypic
behaviour (Davies et al., 2012).
The hypothesis of migration
routes for C. imicola can, in
principal, be tested by tagging with a radio isotope such as P32.
The whole population of larvae in a pool is tagged and allowed to reach
adulthood. Egg masses from all pools within the sampling area are later collected
to determine the distribution of P32 labelled egg massed from migrating females.
Now we arrive at last at my central
point. Because of their spatial predictability over geological time scales, rock
pools, possibly along with deep sea fumaroles, may be habitats unique on this earth.
Their spatial relationships are presumably not even interrupted by tectonic
place movements. We should not forget either, that rock pools are candidate
places for the origin of life on earth (Mclachlan 2017). For these reasons it would
be interesting to determine the phylogeny of these two strange rock pools
breeding species. I predict that they will prove to be sister species, but if an
hypothesis of sister species is rejected another interesting conclusion is indicated.
I mean the independent evolution of two species adapting to an ephemeral
habitat with low levels of interspecific competition and high levels of spatial
predictability (McLachlan & Ladle 2001).
references
Armitage, P., Cranston, P. S., & Pinder, L. C. V. (1995). The Chironomidae. The biology and ecology of
non -biting midges. . London: Chapman & Hall.
Davies, N. B.,
Krebs, J. R., & West, S. A. (2012). An
Introduction to Behavioural Ecology. (4 ed.). Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
McLachlan, A. J.
(1988). Refugia and habitat partitioning among midges (Diptera: Chironomidae)
in rain-pools. Ecological Entomology, 13,
185-193.
McLachlan, A. J.,
& Ladle, R. (2001). Life in the puddle: behavioural and life-cycle
adaptations in the Diptera of tropical rain pools. Biological Reviews 76, 377-388.
McLachlan, A. J.
(2017). The living puddle. http://atholmclachlan.blogspot.com.
West-Eberhard, M. J.
(1992). Adaptation: Current Usages. In E. Fox Keller & E. A. Lloyd (Eds.), Kewords in Evolutionary Biology. London:
Harvard University Press.
West-Eberhard, M. J.
(2003). Developmental Plasticity and
Evolution. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.