Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, University of Tartu, Vanemuise 46, EE-51014 Tartu, Estonia.
J Insect Physiol. 2011 Jun;57(6):712-22. doi: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2011.02.009. Epub 2011 Feb 16.
Given that immature and adult insects have different life styles, different target body compositions can be expected. For adults, such targets will also differ depending on life history strategy, and thus vary among the sexes, and in females depend on the degree of capital versus income breeding and ovigeny. Since these targets may in part be approximated by loss of substances upon eclosion, comparing sexual differences in such losses upon eclosion among species that differ in life history would provide insights into insect functional ecology. We studied weight loss in eclosing insects using original data on pupal and adult live weights of 38 species of Lepidoptera (mainly Geometridae) and further literature data on 15 species of Lepidoptera and six representatives of other insect orders, and applied the phylogenetic independent contrasts approach. In addition, data on live and dry weights of pupae of four species of Lepidoptera are presented. We documented that Lepidoptera typically lose a large proportion (20-80%) of their pupal weight upon adult eclosion. Sexual differences in weight loss varied between absent and strongly male biased. Most of the weight loss was water loss, and sexual differences in adult water content correlate strongly with differences in weight loss. Using feeding habits (feeds or does not feed as an adult) and female biased sexual size dimorphism as measures of degree of capital breeding, we found that the difference among the sexes in weight loss tends to be more pronounced in capital breeding species. Additionally, females of more pro-ovigenic species (large proportion of eggs mature upon emergence) tend to have higher water contents. Our results suggests that metamorphosis is generally facilitated by a high water content, while adults excrete water upon eclosion to benefit flight unless water has been allocated to eggs, or is treated as a capital resource for adult survival or future allocation to eggs.
鉴于幼虫和成虫有不同的生活方式,可以预期它们的目标身体组成会有所不同。对于成虫来说,这些目标还将取决于生活史策略,因此在性别之间以及在雌性中,取决于资本与收入繁殖和卵发生的程度而有所不同。由于这些目标在一定程度上可以通过羽化时物质的损失来近似估计,因此比较不同生活史的物种在羽化时的这些损失的性别差异,将为昆虫功能生态学提供深入的了解。我们使用 38 种鳞翅目(主要是尺蛾科)的蛹和成虫活体重量的原始数据以及 15 种鳞翅目和 6 种其他昆虫目代表的进一步文献数据,研究了羽化昆虫的体重损失,并应用了系统发育独立对比法。此外,还提供了 4 种鳞翅目蛹的活体和干重数据。我们记录到,鳞翅目通常在成虫羽化时失去其蛹重的很大一部分(20-80%)。体重损失的性别差异在不存在和强烈偏向雄性之间变化。大部分体重损失是水分损失,而成虫水分含量的性别差异与体重损失的差异密切相关。使用摄食习性(成虫是否摄食)和雌性偏斜的性体型二态性作为资本繁殖程度的衡量标准,我们发现,在资本繁殖物种中,性别间体重损失的差异往往更为明显。此外,具有更高卵发生能力的物种(在成虫出现时成熟的卵子比例较大)的雌性通常具有更高的水分含量。我们的结果表明,变态通常通过高水分含量来促进,而成虫在羽化时会排泄水分以利于飞行,除非水分已分配给卵子,或者被视为成虫生存或未来分配给卵子的资本资源。