Han Chang S
Department of Biology Kyung Hee University Seoul Korea.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Aug 5;10(17):9514-9521. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6644. eCollection 2020 Sep.
In wing-polymorphic insects, wing morphs differ not only in dispersal capability but also in life history traits because of trade-offs between flight capability and reproduction. When the fitness benefits and costs of producing wings differ between males and females, sex-specific trade-offs can result in sex differences in the frequency of long-winged individuals. Furthermore, the social environment during development affects sex differences in wing development, but few empirical tests of this phenomenon have been performed to date. Here, I used the wing-dimorphic water strider to test how rearing density and sex ratio affect the sex-specific development of long-winged dispersing morphs (i.e., sex-specific macroptery). I also used a full-sib, split-family breeding design to assess genetic effects on density-dependent, sex-specific macroptery. I reared water strider nymphs at either high or low densities and measured their wing development. I found that long-winged morphs developed more frequently in males than in females when individuals were reared in a high-density environment. However, the frequency of long-winged morphs was not biased according to sex when individuals were reared in a low-density environment. In addition, full-sib males and females showed similar macroptery incidence rates at low nymphal density, whereas the macroptery incidence rates differed between full-sib males and females at high nymphal density. Thus complex gene-by-environment-by-sex interactions may explain the density-specific levels of sex bias in macroptery, although this interpretation should be treated with some caution. Overall, my study provides empirical evidence for density-specific, sex-biased wing development. My findings suggest that social factors as well as abiotic factors can be important in determining sex-biased wing development in insects.
在翅多型昆虫中,由于飞行能力与繁殖之间的权衡,翅型不仅在扩散能力上存在差异,在生活史特征上也有所不同。当产生翅膀的适合度收益和成本在雄性和雌性之间存在差异时,特定性别的权衡可能导致长翅个体频率的性别差异。此外,发育过程中的社会环境会影响翅发育的性别差异,但迄今为止,对这一现象的实证检验很少。在这里,我利用翅二型的水黾来测试饲养密度和性别比例如何影响长翅扩散型(即特定性别的大翅型) 的特定性别发育。我还采用了全同胞、分家族育种设计来评估密度依赖性、特定性别大翅型的遗传效应。我将水黾若虫饲养在高密度或低密度环境中,并测量它们的翅发育情况。我发现,当个体在高密度环境中饲养时,雄性中长翅型的发育频率高于雌性。然而,当个体在低密度环境中饲养时,长翅型的频率在性别上没有偏差。此外,在低若虫密度下,全同胞雄性和雌性的大翅型发生率相似,而在高若虫密度下,全同胞雄性和雌性的大翅型发生率不同。因此,复杂的基因×环境×性别相互作用可能解释了大翅型中性别偏差的密度特异性水平,尽管这种解释应谨慎对待。总体而言,我的研究为密度特异性、性别偏向的翅发育提供了实证证据。我的研究结果表明,社会因素以及非生物因素在决定昆虫性别偏向的翅发育中可能很重要。