RRC ID 54244
著者 Englert Duursma D, Gallagher RV, Price JJ, Griffith SC.
タイトル Variation in avian egg shape and nest structure is explained by climatic conditions.
ジャーナル Sci Rep
Abstract Why are avian eggs ovoid, while the eggs of most other vertebrates are symmetrical? The interaction between an egg and its environment likely drives selection that will shape eggs across evolutionary time. For example, eggs incubated in hot, arid regions face acute exposure to harsh climatic conditions relative to those in temperate zones, and this exposure will differ across nest types, with eggs in open nests being more exposed to direct solar radiation than those in enclosed nests. We examined the idea that the geographical distribution of both egg shapes and nest types should reflect selective pressures of key environmental parameters, such as ambient temperature and the drying capacity of air. We took a comparative approach, using 310 passerine species from Australia, many of which are found in some of the most extreme climates on earth. We found that, across the continent, egg elongation decreases and the proportion of species with domed nests with roofs increases in hotter and drier areas with sparse plant canopies. Eggs are most spherical in open nests in the hottest environments, and most elongate in domed nests in wetter, shadier environments. Our findings suggest that climatic conditions played a key role in the evolution of passerine egg shape.
巻・号 8(1)
ページ 4141
公開日 2018-3-7
DOI 10.1038/s41598-018-22436-0
PII 10.1038/s41598-018-22436-0
PMID 29515147
PMC PMC5841347
MeSH Acclimatization / physiology* Animals Birds / physiology* Climate* Nesting Behavior / physiology* Ovum / physiology* Species Specificity Temperature
IF 3.998
引用数 8
リソース情報
GBIF Bird specimens of the Yamashina Institute for Ornithology Zoological specimens of Gifu Prefectural Museum Bird Specimens in the Museum of Nature and Human Activities, Hyogo, Japan Bird collection of National Museum of Nature and Science Ibaraki Nature Museum, Birds collection