Metapopulation Research Group, Department of Biosciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
J Evol Biol. 2012 Nov;25(11):2264-75. doi: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2012.02602.x. Epub 2012 Sep 17.
Dispersal is a key process for understanding the persistence of populations as well as the capacity of organisms to respond to environmental change. Therefore, understanding factors that may facilitate or constrain the evolution of dispersal is of crucial interest. Assessments of phenotypic variation in various behavioural, physiological and morphological traits related to insect dispersal and flight performance are common, yet very little is known about the genetic associations among these traits. We have used experiments on the butterfly Bicyclus anynana to estimate genetic variation and covariation in seven behavioural, physiological and morphological traits related to flight potential and hence dispersal. Our goal was to characterize the heritabilities and genetic correlations among these traits and thus to understand more about the evolution of dispersal-related life-history syndromes in butterflies. Using a version of the animal model, we showed that all of the traits varied between the sexes, and most were either positively or negatively (phenotypically and/or genetically) correlated with body size. Heritable variation was present in most traits, with the highest heritabilities estimated for body mass and thorax ratio. The variance in flight activity among multiple measurements for the same individual was high even after controlling for the prevailing environmental conditions, indicating the importance of behavioural switching and/or inherent randomness associated with this type of movement. A number of dispersal-related traits showed phenotypic correlations among one another, but only a few of these were associated with significant genetic correlations indicating that covariances between these traits in Bicyclus anynana are mainly environmentally induced.
扩散是理解种群持久性以及生物体应对环境变化能力的关键过程。因此,了解可能促进或限制扩散进化的因素至关重要。评估与昆虫扩散和飞行性能相关的各种行为、生理和形态特征的表型变异是常见的,但对于这些特征之间的遗传关联却知之甚少。我们使用蝴蝶 Bicyclus anynana 的实验来估计与飞行潜力相关的七个行为、生理和形态特征的遗传变异和协方差,这些特征与扩散有关。我们的目标是描述这些特征之间的遗传相关性,从而更多地了解蝴蝶中与扩散相关的生活史综合征的进化。使用动物模型的一个版本,我们表明所有特征在性别之间存在差异,并且大多数特征要么与体型呈正相关(表型和/或遗传),要么呈负相关。大多数特征都存在可遗传的变异,其中体质量和胸比的遗传力估计最高。即使在控制环境条件的影响后,同一个体多次测量的飞行活动方差仍然很高,这表明与这种类型的运动相关的行为转换和/或固有随机性的重要性。一些与扩散相关的特征彼此之间存在表型相关性,但只有其中一些与显著的遗传相关性相关,这表明在 Bicyclus anynana 中这些特征之间的协方差主要是由环境引起的。