Małek D, Drobniak S, Gozdek A, Pawlik K, Kramarz P
Institute of Environmental Sciences, Jagiellonian University, ul. Gronostajowa 7, 30-387 Kraków, Poland.
Institute of Environmental Sciences, Jagiellonian University, ul. Gronostajowa 7, 30-387 Kraków, Poland.
J Therm Biol. 2015 Jul;51:110-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2015.04.002. Epub 2015 Apr 8.
Temperature has profound effects on biological functions at all levels of organization. In ectotherms, body size is usually negatively correlated with ambient temperature during development, a phenomenon known as The Temperature-Size Rule (TSR). However, a growing number of studies have indicated that temperature fluctuations have a large influence on life history traits and the implications of such fluctuations for the TSR are unknown. Our study investigated the effect of different constant and fluctuating temperatures on the body mass and development time of red flour beetles (Tribolium castaneum Herbst, 1797); we also examined whether the sexes differed in their responses to thermal conditions. We exposed the progeny of half-sib families of a T. castaneum laboratory strain to one of four temperature regimes: constant 30°C, constant 25°C, fluctuating with a daily mean of 30°C, or fluctuating with a daily mean of 25°C. Sex-specific development time and body mass at emergence were determined. Beetles developed the fastest and had the greatest body mass upon emergence when they were exposed to a constant temperature of 30°C. This pattern was reversed when beetles experienced a constant temperature of 25°C: slowest development and lowest body mass upon emergence were observed. Fluctuations changed those effects significantly - impact of temperature on development time was smaller, while differences in body mass disappeared completely. Our results do not fit TSR predictions. Furthermore, regardless of the temperature regime, females acquired more mass, while there were no differences between sexes in development time to eclosion. This finding fails to support one of the explanations for smaller male size: that selection favors the early emergence of males. We found no evidence of genotype × environment interactions for selected set of traits.
温度对生物组织各个层面的生物学功能都有着深远影响。在变温动物中,发育过程中体型大小通常与环境温度呈负相关,这一现象被称为温度-体型规则(TSR)。然而,越来越多的研究表明,温度波动对生活史特征有很大影响,而这种波动对TSR的影响尚不清楚。我们的研究调查了不同恒温与变温条件对赤拟谷盗(Tribolium castaneum Herbst,1797)体重和发育时间的影响;我们还研究了不同性别对热条件的反应是否存在差异。我们将赤拟谷盗实验室品系半同胞家系的后代置于四种温度条件之一:恒温30°C、恒温25°C、日平均温度波动为30°C或日平均温度波动为25°C。测定了羽化时特定性别的发育时间和体重。当暴露在30°C恒温条件下时,甲虫发育最快,羽化时体重最大。当甲虫处于25°C恒温条件下时,这种模式则相反:观察到发育最慢且羽化时体重最低。温度波动显著改变了这些影响——温度对发育时间的影响较小,而体重差异则完全消失。我们的结果不符合TSR的预测。此外,无论温度条件如何,雌性获得的体重更多,而羽化发育时间在性别之间没有差异。这一发现不支持对雄性体型较小的一种解释:即选择有利于雄性的早羽化。对于所选的一组性状,我们没有发现基因型×环境相互作用的证据。