Rosa Elena, Saastamoinen Marjo
Centre of Excellence in Metapopulation Research, Department of Biosciences, University of Helsinki, PO Box 65, Viikinkaari 1, 00014, Helsinki, Finland.
Oecologia. 2017 Jul;184(3):633-642. doi: 10.1007/s00442-017-3903-7. Epub 2017 Jul 6.
Organisms with complex life-cycles acquire essential nutrients as juveniles, and hence even a short-term food stress during development can impose serious fitness costs apparent in adults. We used the Glanville fritillary butterfly to investigate the effects of larval food stress on adult performance under semi-natural conditions in a population enclosure. We were specifically interested in whether the negative effects observed were due to body mass reduction only or whether additional effects unrelated to pupal mass were evident. The two sexes responded differently to the larval food stress. In females, larval food stress reduced pupal mass and reproductive performance. The reduced reproductive performance was partially mediated by pupal mass reduction. Food stressed females also had reduced within-patch mobility, and this effect was not dependent on pupal mass. Conversely, food stress had no effect on male pupal mass, suggesting a full compensation via prolonged development time. Nonetheless, food stressed males were less likely to sire any eggs, potentially due to changes in their territorial behavior, as indicated by food stress also increasing male within-patch mobility (i.e., patrolling behavior). When males did sire eggs, the offspring number and viability were unaffected by male food stress treatment. Viability was in general higher for offspring sired by lighter males. Our study highlights how compensatory mechanisms after larval food stress can act in a sex-specific manner and that the alteration in body mass is only partially responsible for the reduced adult performance observed.
具有复杂生命周期的生物体在幼体阶段获取必需营养,因此发育期间即使短期的食物压力也可能给成虫带来明显的严重适合度代价。我们利用格兰维尔豹纹蝶在种群围栏的半自然条件下研究幼虫食物压力对成虫表现的影响。我们特别感兴趣的是,观察到的负面影响是否仅归因于体重减轻,或者是否存在与蛹质量无关的其他影响。两性对幼虫食物压力的反应不同。在雌性中,幼虫食物压力降低了蛹质量和繁殖性能。繁殖性能的降低部分由蛹质量的减少介导。食物压力大的雌性在斑块内的活动能力也降低了,而且这种影响不依赖于蛹质量。相反,食物压力对雄性蛹质量没有影响,这表明通过延长发育时间实现了完全补偿。尽管如此,食物压力大的雄性产受精卵的可能性较小,这可能是由于其领地行为的变化,食物压力也增加了雄性在斑块内的活动能力(即巡逻行为)就表明了这一点。当雄性确实产受精卵时,后代数量和活力不受雄性食物压力处理的影响。一般来说,较轻雄性所产后代的活力更高。我们的研究强调了幼虫食物压力后的补偿机制如何以性别特异性方式起作用,以及体重变化只是观察到的成虫表现下降的部分原因。