Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and Université Paul Sabatier Toulouse III, SETE Station d'Ecologie Théorique et Expérimentale, UMR 5321, Moulis, France.
Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle (Sorbonne Universités), Institut de Systématique, Evolution et Biodiversité, UMR 7205, 57 rue Cuvier, 75005, Paris, cedex 5, France.
Insect Sci. 2019 Aug;26(4):743-752. doi: 10.1111/1744-7917.12568. Epub 2018 Feb 20.
When, how often and for how long organisms mate can have strong consequences for individual fitness and are crucial aspects of evolutionary ecology. Such determinants are likely to be of even greater importance in monandrous species and species with short adult life stages. Previous work suggests that mobility, a key dispersal-related trait, may affect the dynamics of copulations, but few studies have investigated the impact of individual mobility on mating latency, copulation duration and oviposition latency simultaneously. In this paper, we monitored the copulation dynamics of 40 males and 40 females, as well as the oviposition dynamics of the females of the Large White butterfly Pieris brassicae, a facultative long-distance disperser butterfly. Individuals from a breeding were selected to create a uniform distribution of mobility and we recorded the timing, number and duration of all copulations in a semiexperimental system. We showed that mobility, measured as the time spent in flight under stressful conditions (a proxy of dispersal tendency), correlates with all aspects of copulation dynamics: mobile males and females mated earlier and for shorter periods than less mobile individuals. In turn, late mating females increased the time between copulation and oviposition. These results feed the previously described mobility syndrome of P. brassicae, involving morphological and physiological characters, with life-history traits. We suggest that the reduction of mating latency and copulation duration has an adaptive value in dispersing individuals, as their life expectancy might be shorter than that of sedentary individuals.
生物的交配时间、频率和持续时间对个体适应性有重要影响,是进化生态学的关键方面。这种决定性因素在单配性物种和成年阶段较短的物种中可能更为重要。先前的研究表明,移动性是与扩散相关的关键特征,可能会影响交配的动态,但很少有研究同时调查个体移动性对交配潜伏期、交配持续时间和产卵潜伏期的影响。在本文中,我们监测了 40 只雄性和 40 只雌性大粉蝶 Pieris brassicae 的交配动态,以及该蝴蝶的雌性产卵动态。从繁殖个体中选择来创建移动性的均匀分布,并在半实验系统中记录所有交配的时间、数量和持续时间。我们表明,飞行时间(代表扩散倾向的指标)作为衡量移动性的指标,与交配动态的所有方面相关:移动性较强的雄性和雌性比移动性较弱的个体更早和持续时间更短进行交配。反过来,交配较晚的雌性会增加交配和产卵之间的时间间隔。这些结果与之前描述的 P. brassicae 移动性综合征有关,涉及形态和生理特征与生活史特征。我们认为,减少交配潜伏期和交配持续时间在扩散个体中具有适应性价值,因为它们的预期寿命可能比定居个体短。