Rajpurohit Subhash, Schmidt Paul S
a Department of Biology , University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia , PA , USA.
Fly (Austin). 2016 Oct;10(4):149-61. doi: 10.1080/19336934.2016.1194145. Epub 2016 May 26.
Measuring thermal behavior in smaller insects is particularly challenging. In this study, we describe a new horizontal thermal gradient apparatus designed to study adult thermal behavior in small insects and apply it using D. melanogaster as a model and case study. Specifically, we used this apparatus and associated methodology to examine the effects of sex, geographic origin, and developmental rearing temperature on temperature preferences exhibited by adults in a controlled laboratory environment. The thermal gradient established by the apparatus was stable over diurnal and calendar time. Furthermore, the distribution of adult flies across thermal habitats within the apparatus remained stable following the period of acclimation, as evidenced by the high degree of repeatability across both biological and technical replicates. Our data demonstrate significant and predictable variation in temperature preference for all 3 assayed variables. Behaviorally, females were more sensitive than males to higher temperatures. Flies originating from high latitude, temperate populations exhibited a greater preference for cooler temperatures; conversely, flies originating from low latitude, tropical habitats demonstrated a relative preference for higher temperatures. Similarly, larval rearing temperature was positively associated with adult thermal behavior: low culture temperatures increased the relative adult preference for cooler temperatures, and this response was distinct between the sexes and for flies from the temperate and subtropical geographic regions. Together, these results demonstrate that the temperature chamber apparatus elicits robust, predictable, and quantifiable thermal preference behavior that could readily be applied to other taxa to examine the role of temperature-mediated behavior in a variety of contexts.
测量小型昆虫的热行为尤其具有挑战性。在本研究中,我们描述了一种新的水平热梯度装置,该装置旨在研究小型昆虫成虫的热行为,并以黑腹果蝇作为模型和案例进行应用。具体而言,我们使用该装置及相关方法,在可控的实验室环境中,研究性别、地理起源和发育饲养温度对成虫温度偏好的影响。该装置所建立的热梯度在昼夜和日历时间内保持稳定。此外,经过适应期后,装置内热生境中成年果蝇的分布保持稳定,这在生物和技术重复实验中的高度可重复性中得到了证明。我们的数据表明,对于所有3个测定变量,温度偏好存在显著且可预测的差异。在行为上,雌性比雄性对较高温度更敏感。来自高纬度温带种群的果蝇对较凉爽温度表现出更大的偏好;相反,来自低纬度热带生境的果蝇则相对偏好较高温度。同样,幼虫饲养温度与成虫热行为呈正相关:低培养温度增加了成虫对较凉爽温度的相对偏好,并且这种反应在性别之间以及来自温带和亚热带地理区域的果蝇之间是不同的。总之,这些结果表明,温度室装置能引发强大、可预测且可量化的热偏好行为,这种行为可轻易应用于其他分类群,以研究温度介导行为在各种环境中的作用。