Department of Biological Sciences, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA.
Department of Entomology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.
Commun Biol. 2022 May 16;5(1):469. doi: 10.1038/s42003-022-03396-8.
Animals derive resources from their diet and allocate them to organismal functions such as growth, maintenance, reproduction, and dispersal. How variation in diet quality can affect resource allocation to life-history traits, in particular those important to locomotion and dispersal, is poorly understood. We hypothesize that, particularly for specialist herbivore insects that are in co-evolutionary arms races with host plants, changes in host plant will impact performance. From their coevolutionary arms-race with plants, to a complex migratory life history, Monarch butterflies are among the most iconic insect species worldwide. Population declines initiated international conservation efforts involving the replanting of a variety of milkweed species. However, this practice was implemented with little regard for how diverse defensive chemistry of milkweeds experienced by monarch larvae may affect adult fitness traits. We report that adult flight muscle investment, flight energetics, and maintenance costs depend on the host plant species of larvae, and correlate with concentration of milkweed-derived cardenolides sequestered by adults. Our findings indicate host plant species can impact monarchs by affecting fuel requirements for flight.
动物从其饮食中获取资源,并将其分配给生物体的功能,如生长、维持、繁殖和扩散。饮食质量的变化如何影响对生活史特征的资源分配,特别是对运动和扩散很重要的特征,这一点还不太清楚。我们假设,特别是对于与宿主植物处于共同进化军备竞赛中的专门食草昆虫来说,宿主植物的变化将影响其性能。从与植物的共同进化军备竞赛,到复杂的迁徙生活史,帝王蝶是全球最具标志性的昆虫物种之一。种群数量的减少引发了国际保护努力,包括重新种植多种马利筋物种。然而,这种做法的实施几乎没有考虑到帝王蝶幼虫经历的马利筋防御化学物质的多样性如何影响成虫的适应性特征。我们报告说,成虫飞行肌肉的投资、飞行能量学和维持成本取决于幼虫的宿主植物种类,并与成虫隔离的马利筋衍生的卡烯醇的浓度相关。我们的研究结果表明,宿主植物的种类可以通过影响飞行所需的燃料来影响帝王蝶。