Soumen Mallick, Jorge Granados-Tello, Erik van Bergen, Ullasa Kodandaramaiah, Oskar Brattström, Paul M. Brakefield, Freerk Molleman
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引用次数: 0
摘要
虽然温度变化似乎是许多物种成虫性状可塑性的主要环境线索,但在某些地区,依赖温度会导致成虫表型与环境不匹配。我们在一个每年有两个雨季、季节温度单峰变化不大的潮湿热带森林中测量了六种 Bicyclus 蝴蝶(蛱蝶科:蝶形目:Mycalesina)的表型。蝴蝶的体型和相对眼斑大小表现出微妙的时间变化,而相对雄冠花长度则对时间环境变化保持稳定。气温升高后,体型趋于变小,某些物种-眼斑组合的相对眼斑尺寸变大。这表明这些蝴蝶遵循 "越热越小 "的规则,并在眼斑大小方面表现出该支系典型的发育可塑性。除了 B. auricruda 的 Cu1 和一些始终很小的眼斑外,其他眼斑的大小往往是相互关联的。雄蕊长度与眼斑大小无关。这种相关模式表明,利用温度和降雨相关线索来决定眼斑大小的线索使用和共享机制是一致的,但也有一些例外。
Seasonal plasticity in sympatric Bicyclus butterflies in a tropical forest where temperature does not predict rainfall
While variation in temperature appears to be the main environmental cue for plasticity in adult traits in many species of Mycalesina, relying on temperature would result in a mismatch between adult phenotype and environment in some regions. We measured phenotypes of six species of Bicyclus butterflies (Nymphalidae: Satyrinae: Mycalesina) in a humid tropical forest with two rainy seasons per year and modest unimodal seasonal temperature variation, such that temperature does not predict rainfall and butterflies can reproduce year-round. The butterflies showed subtle temporal variation in body size and relative eyespot size, while relative androconia length was robust to temporal environmental variation. After higher temperatures, body size tended be smaller, and relative eyespot size was larger for some species-eyespot combinations. This indicates that these butterflies follow the “hotter is smaller” rule, and show developmental plasticity in eyespot size that is typical in this clade. Eyespot sizes tended to be correlated with each other, except Cu1 in B. auricruda and some eyespots that always remained very small. Androconia length was not related to eyespot size. This pattern of correlations suggests conserved cue-use and shared mechanisms for eyespot size using both temperature and rainfall-related cues, with some exceptions.
期刊介绍:
Ranked by the ISI index, Biotropica is a highly regarded source of original research on the ecology, conservation and management of all tropical ecosystems, and on the evolution, behavior, and population biology of tropical organisms. Published on behalf of the Association of Tropical Biology and Conservation, the journal''s Special Issues and Special Sections quickly become indispensable references for researchers in the field. Biotropica publishes timely Papers, Reviews, Commentaries, and Insights. Commentaries generate thought-provoking ideas that frequently initiate fruitful debate and discussion, while Reviews provide authoritative and analytical overviews of topics of current conservation or ecological importance. The newly instituted category Insights replaces Short Communications.