Hemstrom William, Freedman Micah, Zalucki Myron P, Miller Michael
Department of Animal Science, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA.
Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA.
BMC Ecol Evol. 2025 May 7;25(1):43. doi: 10.1186/s12862-025-02384-w.
Monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) are a charismatic and culturally important North American butterfly species famous for their unique, dramatic migratory life history. While non-migratory populations of the species are widespread and apparently stable, migratory populations in North America have recently seen declines, prompting concern that the migratory phenomenon in North America may be at risk of disappearing. In contrast, a relatively recently-established monarch population in Australia has rapidly re-acquired a migratory life history following hundreds of generations of residency and successive bottlenecks as the species island-hopped across the Pacific during the late 1800s and early 1900s. The process by which migration re-emerged in Australian monarchs is not currently known.
We raised and sequenced individuals from Queensland, Australia under environmental conditions associated with migration initiation and found strong variance in reproductive diapause, a key migratory trait, between families which was associated with variation at the spectrin beta chain protein Karst. This protein is known to be involved in diapause termination in monarchs but has not previously been identified as associated with migratory life history variance. The most strongly associated migratory SNPs are also present at a low frequency in North America, suggesting that the Australian population is leveraging standing variation which persisted across repeated bottlenecks as Monarchs spread across the Pacific.
Our results provide an intriguing example of how the temporary loss of migration-in this case likely over hundreds of generations-may not entail the loss of genetic variation associated with this complex life history strategy.
黑脉金斑蝶(Danaus plexippus)是一种具有魅力且在文化上具有重要意义的北美蝴蝶物种,以其独特、显著的迁徙生活史而闻名。虽然该物种的非迁徙种群分布广泛且显然稳定,但北美地区的迁徙种群最近数量出现了下降,这引发了人们对北美迁徙现象可能面临消失风险的担忧。相比之下,澳大利亚一个相对较新建立的黑脉金斑蝶种群在经历了数百代的定居以及在19世纪末和20世纪初该物种跨太平洋逐岛迁徙过程中的连续瓶颈期后,迅速重新获得了迁徙生活史。目前尚不清楚澳大利亚黑脉金斑蝶重新出现迁徙现象的过程。
我们在与迁徙开始相关的环境条件下饲养并对来自澳大利亚昆士兰州的个体进行了测序,发现家系之间在生殖滞育(一种关键的迁徙特征)方面存在很大差异,这与血影蛋白β链蛋白Karst的变异有关。已知这种蛋白质参与黑脉金斑蝶的滞育终止,但此前尚未被确定与迁徙生活史变异相关。与迁徙关联最强的单核苷酸多态性(SNP)在北美也以低频率存在,这表明澳大利亚种群正在利用在黑脉金斑蝶跨太平洋扩散过程中历经多次瓶颈期仍持续存在的现有变异。
我们的研究结果提供了一个有趣的例子,说明迁徙的暂时丧失——在这种情况下可能历经了数百代——不一定会导致与这种复杂生活史策略相关的遗传变异的丧失。