Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, MN 55108, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2013 Aug;53(2):329-39. doi: 10.1093/icb/ict030. Epub 2013 Apr 26.
Plasticity in the development and expression of behavior may allow organisms to cope with novel and rapidly changing environments. However, plasticity itself may depend on the developmental experiences of an individual. For instance, individuals reared in complex, enriched environments develop enhanced cognitive abilities as a result of increased synaptic connections and neurogenesis. This suggests that costs associated with behavioral plasticity-in particular, increased investment in "self" at the expense of reproduction-may also be flexible. Using butterflies as a system, this work tests whether allocation of resources changes as a result of experiences in "difficult" environments that require more investment in learning. We contrast allocation of resources among butterflies with experience in environments that vary in the need for learning. Butterflies with experience searching for novel (i.e., red) hosts, or searching in complex non-host environments, allocate more resources (protein and carbohydrate reserves) to their own flight muscle. In addition, butterflies with experience in these more difficult environments allocate more resources per individual offspring (i.e., egg size and/or lipid reserves). This results in a mother's experience having significant effects on the growth of her offspring (i.e., dry mass and wing length). A separate study showed this re-allocation of resources comes at the expense of lifetime fecundity. These results suggest that investment in learning, and associated changes in life history, can be adjusted depending on an individual's current need, and their offspring's future needs, for learning.
行为的发展和表达的可塑性可以使生物适应新的和快速变化的环境。然而,可塑性本身可能取决于个体的发育经历。例如,在复杂、丰富的环境中饲养的个体由于突触连接和神经发生的增加而发展出更强的认知能力。这表明,与行为可塑性相关的成本——特别是为了“自我”而牺牲繁殖的投资——也可能是灵活的。利用蝴蝶作为系统,这项工作测试了资源分配是否会因需要更多学习投资的“困难”环境经历而发生变化。我们对比了在学习需求不同的环境中经历的蝴蝶的资源分配。有寻找新(即红色)宿主或在复杂非宿主环境中搜索经验的蝴蝶,会将更多的资源(蛋白质和碳水化合物储备)分配给自身的飞行肌肉。此外,在这些更困难的环境中经历过的蝴蝶会为每个个体后代分配更多的资源(即卵大小和/或脂质储备)。这导致母亲的经验对她的后代的生长(即干重和翅膀长度)有显著影响。另一项研究表明,这种资源的重新分配是以终身繁殖力为代价的。这些结果表明,学习的投资以及相关的生活史变化可以根据个体当前的需求以及其后代未来的学习需求进行调整。