Zoological Institute & Museum, University of Greifswald, Greifswald, Germany.
PLoS One. 2013 Apr 30;8(4):e62434. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0062434. Print 2013.
Although fast growth seems to be generally favored by natural selection, growth rates are rarely maximized in nature. Consequently, fast growth is predicted to carry costs resulting in intrinsic trade-offs. Disentangling such trade-offs is of great ecological importance in order to fully understand the prospects and limitations of growth rate variation. A recent study provided evidence for a hitherto unknown cost of fast growth, namely reduced cold stress resistance. Such relationships could be especially important under climate change. Against this background we here investigate the relationships between individual larval growth rate and adult heat as well as cold stress resistance, using eleven data sets from four different insect species (three butterfly species: Bicyclus anynana, Lycaena tityrus, Pieris napi; one Dipteran species: Protophormia terraenovae). Despite using different species (and partly different populations within species) and an array of experimental manipulations (e.g. different temperatures, photoperiods, feeding regimes, inbreeding levels), we were not able to provide any consistent evidence for trade-offs between fast growth and temperature stress resistance in these four insect species.
虽然快速生长似乎普遍受到自然选择的青睐,但在自然界中,生长率很少被最大化。因此,快速生长预计会带来成本,从而导致内在的权衡。为了充分了解生长率变化的前景和局限性,厘清这种权衡关系具有重要的生态意义。最近的一项研究提供了一个迄今为止未知的快速生长代价的证据,即降低了对寒冷压力的抵抗力。在气候变化的背景下,这种关系可能尤为重要。有鉴于此,我们使用来自四个不同昆虫物种(三种蝴蝶物种:Bicyclus anynana、Lycaena tityrus、Pieris napi;一种双翅目物种:Protophormia terraenovae)的十一个数据集,调查了个体幼虫生长率与成虫耐热和抗寒能力之间的关系。尽管我们使用了不同的物种(以及部分物种内的不同种群)和一系列实验操作(例如不同的温度、光周期、饲养制度、近亲繁殖水平),但我们无法为这四个昆虫物种中快速生长和对温度压力抵抗力之间的权衡关系提供任何一致的证据。