4.8 Article

A framework for studying behavioral evolution by reconstructing ancestral repertoires

期刊

ELIFE
卷 10, 期 -, 页码 -

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eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.61806

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  1. National Institute of Mental Health [MH115831-01]
  2. Hughes Medical Institute
  3. Research Corporation for Science Advancement [25999]
  4. National Science Foundation [1806833]
  5. Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnologia e Innovacion de Argentina

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The study introduces a new framework for simultaneously studying the evolution of multiple behaviors. By measuring the behavioral repertoire of fruit flies and estimating intra- and inter-species behavioral covariances, the research found similarities in the covariance structure of intra-specific behavioral variation and proposed a method to identify groups of behaviors that appear to have evolved in a correlated manner.
Although different animal species often exhibit extensive variation in many behaviors, typically scientists examine one or a small number of behaviors in any single study. Here, we propose a new framework to simultaneously study the evolution of many behaviors. We measured the behavioral repertoire of individuals from six species of fruit flies using unsupervised techniques and identified all stereotyped movements exhibited by each species. We then fit a Generalized Linear Mixed Model to estimate the intra- and inter-species behavioral covariances, and, by using the known phylogenetic relationships among species, we estimated the (unobserved) behaviors exhibited by ancestral species. We found that much of intra-specific behavioral variation has a similar covariance structure to previously described long-time scale variation in an individual's behavior, suggesting that much of the measured variation between individuals of a single species in our assay reflects differences in the status of neural networks, rather than genetic or developmental differences between individuals. We then propose a method to identify groups of behaviors that appear to have evolved in a correlated manner, illustrating how sets of behaviors, rather than individual behaviors, likely evolved. Our approach provides a new framework for identifying co-evolving behaviors and may provide new opportunities to study the mechanistic basis of behavioral evolution.

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