Kingsolver Joel G
Department of Zoology, University of Washington, Box 351800, Seattle, Washington, 98195.
Evolution. 1999 Oct;53(5):1479-1490. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1999.tb05412.x.
Butterflies have distinctively large wings relative to body size, but the functional and fitness consequences of wing size for butterflies are largely unknown. I use natural and experimentally generated variation in wing surface area to examine how decreased wing size affects flight and survival in a population of the western white butterfly, Pontia occidentalis. In the laboratory, experimental reductions in wing area (reduced-wings manipulation) significantly increased wingbeat frequencies of hovering butterflies, whereas a control manipulation had no detectable effects. In contrast, behavioral observations and mark-release-recapture (MRR) studies in the field detected no significant differences in flight activity, initial dispersal rates, or recapture probabilities among treatment groups. Estimated selection coefficients indicated that natural variation in wing size, body mass, and wing loading in the population were not significantly correlated with survival in the two MRR studies. In two mark-recapture studies with manipulated butterflies, survival probabilities were not significantly different for reduced-wings individuals compared with control or unmanipulated individuals. In summary, experimental reductions in wing area significantly altered aspects of flight in the laboratory, but did not detectably alter flight or survival in the field for this population. The large wing size typical of butterflies may reduce the functional and survival consequences of wing size variation within populations.
相对于体型而言,蝴蝶的翅膀格外大,但翅膀大小对蝴蝶的功能和适应性影响在很大程度上尚不清楚。我利用翅膀表面积的自然变异和实验产生的变异,来研究翅膀变小如何影响西方白蝴蝶(Pontia occidentalis)种群的飞行和生存。在实验室中,实验性地减小翅膀面积(翅膀缩减操作)显著提高了悬停蝴蝶的振翅频率,而对照操作则没有可检测到的影响。相比之下,在野外进行的行为观察和标记释放再捕获(MRR)研究未发现各处理组在飞行活动、初始扩散率或再捕获概率上有显著差异。估计的选择系数表明,在两项MRR研究中,该种群中翅膀大小、体重和翼载荷的自然变异与生存率没有显著相关性。在两项对经过操作的蝴蝶进行的标记再捕获研究中,翅膀缩减个体与对照或未处理个体相比,生存概率没有显著差异。总之,实验性地减小翅膀面积在实验室中显著改变了飞行的某些方面,但在野外并未检测到对该种群飞行或生存的改变。蝴蝶典型的大翅膀大小可能会降低种群内翅膀大小变异对功能和生存的影响。