Guerra Patrick A, Reppert Steven M
Department of Neurobiology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Mar 22;12(3):e0174023. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0174023. eCollection 2017.
The larvae of the giant silk moth (Hyalophora cecropia) spin strikingly dimorphic, multilayered cocoons that are either large and fluffy (baggy) or significantly smaller and tightly woven (compact). Although these cocoon-morphs share the same function (i.e., housing for pupal to adult development during overwintering), previous work has been unable to determine why cocoon dimorphism exists. We addressed this issue in cecropia moth cocoons collected along power line right-of-way habitats in Massachusetts. We first characterized the architectural differences between cocoon-morphs for all three cocoon sections (outer and inner envelopes, and the intermediate layer separating the two). We show that outer envelope structural and ultrastructural differences are what underlie dimorphism. Using a common spinning arena, we next show that the behavioral suites used to construct the outer envelopes of the two morphs are significantly different in behavioral time investment and patterning, as well as in the location of silk placement in the common spinning arena. Finally, we compared the cocoon-morphs in response to various environmental stressors to ask whether dimorphism is an adaptive response to such pressures. In contrast to compact cocoons, we find that baggy cocoons act as heat sinks and allow greater moisture permeability; differences in outer envelope architecture underlie these characteristics. These two biophysical properties could be advantageous for pupae in baggy cocoons, during unseasonably cold or dry conditions encountered during development prior to adult emergence. Our results suggest that cocoon dimorphism in the cecropia moth may provide a bet-hedging strategy for dealing with varying environmental conditions in Massachusetts and perhaps over its entire habitat range, during pupal to adult development.
大蚕蛾(帝王蛾)的幼虫会结出具有显著二态性的多层茧,这些茧要么又大又蓬松(宽松型),要么明显更小且编织紧密(紧实型)。尽管这些茧的形态具有相同的功能(即作为越冬期间蛹发育至成虫的庇护所),但先前的研究一直无法确定茧二态性存在的原因。我们针对在马萨诸塞州输电线沿线栖息地收集的帝王蛾茧解决了这个问题。我们首先描述了所有三个茧层(外层和内层包膜以及分隔两者的中间层)之间茧形态的结构差异。我们表明,外层包膜的结构和超微结构差异是二态性的基础。接下来,我们使用一个共同的吐丝场地,表明用于构建两种形态外层包膜的行为模式在行为时间投入和模式上以及在共同吐丝场地中丝的放置位置上都有显著差异。最后,我们比较了茧形态对各种环境压力源的反应,以探究二态性是否是对这些压力的适应性反应。与紧实型茧不同,我们发现宽松型茧起到散热器的作用,并且具有更高的透湿性;这些特征的基础是外层包膜结构的差异。在成虫羽化前发育期间遇到异常寒冷或干燥的条件时,这两种生物物理特性可能对宽松型茧中的蛹有利。我们的结果表明,帝王蛾的茧二态性可能为其在马萨诸塞州乃至其整个栖息地范围内从蛹发育到成虫的过程中应对不同环境条件提供一种风险对冲策略。