Published October 15, 2016 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Effect of winter cold duration on spring phenology of the orange tip butterfly, Anthocharis cardamines

  • 1. Stockholm University

Description

The effect of spring temperature on spring phenology is well understood in a wide range of taxa. However, studies on how winter conditions may affect spring phenology are underrepresented. Previous work on Anthocharis cardamines (orange tip butterfly) has shown population-specific reaction norms of spring development in relation to spring temperature and a speeding up of post-winter development with longer winter durations. In this experiment, we examined the effects of a greater and ecologically relevant range of winter durations on post-winter pupal development of A. cardamines of two populations from the United Kingdom and two from Sweden. By analyzing pupal weight loss and metabolic rate, we were able to separate the overall post-winter pupal development into diapause duration and post-diapause development. We found differences in the duration of cold needed to break diapause among populations, with the southern UK population requiring a shorter duration than the other populations. We also found that the overall post-winter pupal development time, following removal from winter cold, was negatively related to cold duration, through a combined effect of cold duration on diapause duration and on post-diapause development time. Longer cold durations also lead to higher population synchrony in hatching. For current winter durations in the field, the A. cardamines population of southern UK could have a reduced development rate and lower synchrony in emergence because of short winters. With future climate change, this might become an issue also for other populations. Differences in winter conditions in the field among these four populations are large enough to have driven local adaptation of characteristics controlling spring phenology in response to winter duration. The observed phenology of these populations depends on a combination of winter and spring temperatures; thus, both must be taken into account for accurate predictions of phenology.

Notes

Files

a_card.txt

Files (24.9 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:21fc3c0dccc4f1dc1ec3d9f7ca591a8f
8.3 kB Preview Download
md5:6e772d3d112ea44e3af2a83265fccc65
405 Bytes Download
md5:177b9565805e9ceba641e536c89bf9a5
847 Bytes Download
md5:7e78d63e362bfada05b83672163c2660
1.7 kB Download
md5:d6a8414a106d0efd2014ca0855131622
943 Bytes Download
md5:3e750045d20b142df74c8a56bc207e5a
808 Bytes Download
md5:b6be286ac865f090e24392dc29f306b2
2.0 kB Preview Download
md5:b6be286ac865f090e24392dc29f306b2
2.0 kB Preview Download
md5:b6be286ac865f090e24392dc29f306b2
2.0 kB Preview Download
md5:b6be286ac865f090e24392dc29f306b2
2.0 kB Preview Download
md5:b6be286ac865f090e24392dc29f306b2
2.0 kB Preview Download
md5:b6be286ac865f090e24392dc29f306b2
2.0 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1002/ece3.1773 (DOI)