Evolution, 4th Edition

(Amelia) #1
70 CHAPTER 3

predators in many families commonly have a streamlined shape, a forked tail fin,
and a slender tail base (caudal peduncle), whereas fishes that live in complicated
environments, such as among corals or vegetation, have a deep, compressed body
that enables them to change direction rapidly (FIGURE 3.19).
Biologists often predict such correlations by postulating, perhaps on the basis
of a model, the adaptive features we would expect to evolve repeatedly in response
to a given selective factor. For example, in species in which a female mates with
multiple males, the several males’ sperm compete to fertilize eggs. Males that pro-
duce more abundant sperm should therefore have a reproductive advantage. In
primates, the quantity of sperm produced is correlated with the size of the testes,
so large testes should be expected to provide a greater reproductive advantage in
polygamous than in monogamous species. Paul Harvey and Mark Pagel compiled
data from prior publications on the mating behavior and testes size of various pri-
mates [25]. They confirmed that, as predicted, the weight of the testes, relative to
body weight, is significantly higher among polygamous than monogamous taxa
(FIGURE 3.20).
An important aspect of this example is that although all the data needed to test
this hypothesis already existed, the relationship between the two variables was
not known until Harvey and Pagel compiled the data, because no one had had any
reason to do so until an adaptive hypothesis had been formulated. Hypotheses
about adaptation can be fruitful because they suggest investigations that would
not otherwise occur to us.
Also, notice that because the consistent relationship between testes size and
mating system was not known a priori, the hypothesis generated a prediction. The

Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_03.18.ai Date 12-01-2016

Penstemon strictus

P. barbatus

(B) Normal ower

(C) Lower lip removed

(D) Projecting anthers

(E) Narrow corolla

(A)

FIGURE 3.18 Experimental test of a hypothesis of
adaptation. (A) Bee-pollinated Penstemon strictus
(top) and hummingbird-pollinated P. barbatus
(bottom). (B–E) Experimental modifications of
flowers of a bee-pollinated species (Penstemon
strictus) to mimic features of hummingbird-
pollinated species of Penstemon. (B) The normal
flower of P. strictus. Modifications included (C)
removal of the lower lip “landing platform,” (D) re-
attaching stamens so that the anthers project from
the flower, and (E) constriction to form a narrower
corolla tube. (B–E after [7].)

03_EVOL4E_CH03.indd 70 3/22/17 1:19 PM

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