Published June 5, 2024 | Version v1
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Data from: Thermal plasticity in protective wing pigmentation is modulated by genotype and food availability in an insect model of seasonal polyphenism

  • 1. University of Lisbon
  • 2. University of Helsinki

Description

Phenotypic variation in natural populations results from complex interactions between organisms and their changing environments. The environment shapes both phenotypic frequencies (during adaptation) and organismal phenotypes (through phenotypic plasticity). Developmental plasticity, in particular, refers to the phenomenon whereby an organism's phenotype depends on the environmental conditions during development. It can match phenotype to ecological conditions and help organisms to cope with environmental heterogeneity, including differences between alternating seasons. Experimental studies of developmental plasticity often focus on the impact of individual environmental cues and do not take explicit account of genetic variation. In contrast, natural environments are complex, comprising multiple variables with combined effects that are poorly understood and may vary among genotypes. We investigated the effects of multifactorial environments on the development of the seasonally plastic eyespots of Bicyclus anynana butterflies. Eyespot size depends on developmental temperature and is involved in alternative seasonal strategies for predator avoidance. In nature, both temperature and food availability undergo seasonal fluctuations. However, our understanding of how thermal plasticity in eyespot size varies in response to food availability and across genotypes remains limited. To address this, we investigated the combined effects of temperature (T; two levels: 20°C and 27°C) and food availability (N; two levels: control and limited) during development. We examined their impact on wing and eyespot size in adult males and females from multiple genotypes (G; 28 families). We found evidence of thermal and nutritional plasticity and temperature-by-nutrition interactions (significant TxN) on the size of eyespots in both sexes. Food limitation resulted in relatively smaller eyespots and tempered the effects of temperature. Additionally, we found differences among families for thermal plasticity (significant GxT effects), but not for nutritional plasticity (non-significant GxN effects) nor for the combined effects of temperature and food limitation (non-significant GxTxN effects). Our results reveal the context dependence of thermal plasticity, with the slope of thermal reaction norms varying across genotypes and across nutritional environments. We discuss these results in light of the ecological significance of pigmentation and the value of considering thermal plasticity in studies of the biological impact of climate change.

Notes

Funding provided by: Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia
ROR ID: https://ror.org/00snfqn58
Award Number: PTDC/BIA-EVL/0321/2021

Funding provided by: Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia
ROR ID: https://ror.org/00snfqn58
Award Number: PTDC/BIA-EVF/0017/2014

Methods

For this study we used B. anynana specimens from a previous full-factorial split-brood experiment (doi: 10.1002/ece3.718) examining variation in various life-history traits in relation to two thermal environments, two nutritional treatments, and 28 families (corresponding to different genotypes). An image of one wing of each individual was analysed with custom Mathematica notebooks that allowed the definition and measurement of a wing transect, which we used as a proxy for wing size, and of the diameter of the eyespot included in that transect, which we used as our measurement of eyespot size. We tested the effects of genotype, temperature, and nutrition, as well as interactions between them on eyespot size, with wing size as covariate. We also calculated and analysed the slopes of the thermal and nutritional reaction norms for eyespot size. More details can be found in the Materials and Methods section of the paper these data correspond to.

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Related works

Is cited by
10.1101/2024.02.26.582119 (DOI)