Forister Matthew L, Nice Chris C, Fordyce James A, Gompert Zachariah
Department of Biology/MS 314, University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89557, USA.
Oecologia. 2009 Jun;160(3):551-61. doi: 10.1007/s00442-009-1310-4. Epub 2009 Mar 7.
Herbivorous insects that have recently incorporated novel hosts into their diet provide unique opportunities for understanding factors that promote or constrain the evolution of niche breadth. Lycaeides melissa has colonized both cultivated and feral alfalfa (Medicago sativa) throughout much of North America within the past 200 years. We investigated the quality of the novel host as a resource for juvenile development, and asked if the novel host is a preferred host for oviposition relative to a native host (Astragalus canadensis). Larval-performance and oviposition-preference were examined using L. melissa individuals from a population associated with both M. sativa and A. canadensis, and oviposition-preference was also examined in another population associated exclusively with M. sativa. In addition, we investigated the effects of M. sativa and A. canadensis flowers on both preference and performance. Only one of the hosts, M. sativa, has flowers that are accessible to nectaring butterflies, and we hypothesized that the presence of flowers could affect female behavior. We find that the novel host is a relatively poor larval resource: adults that were reared as larvae on M. sativa were roughly one-third the size of adults that were reared on the native host, A. canadensis. The native host, Astragalus canadensis, is the preferred host in choice experiments involving only foliage. However, when flowers were included in preference assays, the native and novel hosts received similar numbers of eggs. Thus, the presence of flowers on hosts in the field might influence the utilization of a novel and inferior larval resource. These results are consistent with a model in which host shifts are driven by adult behavior that does not directly optimize larval performance.
近期将新宿主纳入其食谱的植食性昆虫,为理解促进或限制生态位宽度进化的因素提供了独特机会。在过去200年里,北美大部分地区的灰蝶(Lycaeides melissa)已在栽培和野生紫花苜蓿(Medicago sativa)上定殖。我们研究了这种新宿主作为幼虫发育资源的质量,并询问相对于本地宿主加拿大黄芪(Astragalus canadensis),新宿主是否是产卵的首选宿主。使用来自与紫花苜蓿和加拿大黄芪都有关联的种群的灰蝶个体,检验幼虫表现和产卵偏好,并且在另一个仅与紫花苜蓿有关联的种群中也检验了产卵偏好。此外,我们研究了紫花苜蓿和加拿大黄芪的花对偏好和表现的影响。只有一种宿主紫花苜蓿有可供吸蜜蝴蝶采蜜的花,我们推测花的存在可能会影响雌蝶行为。我们发现新宿主是一种相对较差的幼虫资源:在紫花苜蓿上作为幼虫饲养的成虫,其大小约为在本地宿主加拿大黄芪上饲养的成虫的三分之一。在仅涉及叶子的选择实验中,本地宿主加拿大黄芪是首选宿主。然而,当在偏好试验中加入花时,本地宿主和新宿主接受的卵数量相似。因此,田间宿主上花的存在可能会影响对一种新的、劣质幼虫资源的利用。这些结果与一个模型一致:宿主转移是由不直接优化幼虫表现的成虫行为驱动的。