Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
PeerJ. 2024 May 22;12:e17432. doi: 10.7717/peerj.17432. eCollection 2024.
Warming generally induces faster developmental and growth rates, resulting in smaller asymptotic sizes of adults in warmer environments (a pattern known as the temperature-size rule). However, whether temperature-size responses are affected across generations, especially when thermal environments differ from one generation to the next, is unclear. Here, we tested temperature-size responses at different ontogenetic stages and in two consecutive generations using two soil-living Collembola species from the family Isotomidae: (asexual) and (sexually reproducing).
We used individuals (progenitors; F0) from cultures maintained during several generations at 15 °C or 20 °C, and exposed their offspring in cohorts (F1) to various thermal environments (15 °C, 20 °C, 25 °C and 30 °C) during their ontogenetic development (from egg laying to first reproduction; ., maturity). We measured development and size traits in the cohorts (egg diameter and body length at maturity), as well as the egg diameters of their progeny (F2). We predicted that temperature-size responses would be predominantly determined by within-generation plasticity, given the quick responsiveness of growth and developmental rates to changing thermal environments. However, we also expected that mismatches in thermal environments across generations would constrain temperature-size responses in offspring, possibly due to transgenerational plasticity.
We found that temperature-size responses were generally weak in the two Collembola species, both for within- and transgenerational plasticity. However, egg and juvenile development were especially responsive at higher temperatures and were slightly affected by transgenerational plasticity. Interestingly, plastic responses among traits varied non-consistently in both Collembola species, with some traits showing plastic responses in one species but not in the other and vice versa. Therefore, our results do not support the view that the mode of reproduction can be used to explain the degree of phenotypic plasticity at the species level, at least between the two Collembola species used in our study. Our findings provide evidence for a general reset of temperature-size responses at the start of each generation and highlight the importance of measuring multiple traits across ontogenetic stages to fully understand species' thermal responses.
升温通常会导致更快的发育和生长速度,从而使在较温暖环境中成长的成年个体体型更小(这一模式被称为温度-体型规律)。然而,温度-体型反应是否会在不同代际之间受到影响,特别是当热环境在一代与下一代之间存在差异时,目前尚不清楚。在这里,我们使用来自等节跳科(Isotomidae)的两种土壤生弹尾目物种(无性生殖)和 (有性生殖),在不同的个体发育阶段和两代连续的世代中测试了温度-体型反应。
我们使用了在 15°C 或 20°C 下培养了多代的个体(亲代;F0),并在其个体发育过程中(从产卵到第一次繁殖;., 成熟),将其后代的后代(F1)暴露在不同的热环境(15°C、20°C、25°C 和 30°C)中。我们测量了群体中的发育和体型特征(成熟时的卵直径和体长),以及它们后代的卵直径(F2)。我们预测,鉴于生长和发育速度对环境温度变化的快速响应,温度-体型反应主要由代内可塑性决定。然而,我们也预计,代际间热环境的不匹配会限制后代的温度-体型反应,这可能是由于跨代可塑性所致。
我们发现,在两种弹尾目物种中,温度-体型反应通常较弱,无论是代内还是跨代可塑性都是如此。然而,卵和幼体发育在较高温度下反应更为敏感,并且受到代际可塑性的轻微影响。有趣的是,在两种弹尾目物种中,性状之间的可塑性反应不一致,一些性状在一种物种中表现出可塑性反应,而在另一种物种中则没有,反之亦然。因此,我们的结果不支持繁殖方式可用于解释物种水平表型可塑性程度的观点,至少在我们研究中使用的两种弹尾目物种之间是如此。我们的研究结果为每一代开始时温度-体型反应的普遍重置提供了证据,并强调了在个体发育阶段测量多个性状以全面了解物种的热反应的重要性。