4.5 Article

Parent-offspring conflicts, optimal bad motherhood and the mother knows best principles in insect herbivores colonizing novel host plants

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 2, Issue 7, Pages 1446-1457

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.267

Keywords

Exotic plants; feeding preference; larval and adult survival; oviposition preference; parent and offspring performance

Funding

  1. J. McLamore Fellowship - University of Miami
  2. OTS (Organization for Tropical Studies) - Donald and Beverly Stone
  3. Christiane Fellowship
  4. Christopher Tyson Fellowship
  5. Smithsonian Postdoctoral Fellowship
  6. National Geographic-Waitt Institute
  7. Rubenstein Fellowship - Encyclopedia of Life to C. Garcia-Robledo
  8. Cooper Fellowship, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Miami
  9. National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Aging [P01 AG022500-01]
  10. NSF [DEB-0614457]

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Specialization of insect herbivores to one or a few host plants stimulated the development of two hypotheses on how natural selection should shape oviposition preferences: The mother knows best principle suggests that females prefer to oviposit on hosts that increase offspring survival. The optimal bad motherhood principle predicts that females prefer to oviposit on hosts that increase their own longevity. In insects colonizing novel host plants, current theory predicts that initial preferences of insect herbivores should be maladaptive, leading to ecological traps. Ecological trap theory does not take into account the fact that insect lineages frequently switch hosts at both ecological and evolutionary time scales. Therefore, the behavior of insect herbivores facing novel hosts is also shaped by natural selection. Using a study system in which four Cephaloleia beetles are currently expanding their diets from native to exotic plants in the order Zingiberales, we determined if initial oviposition preferences are conservative, maladaptive, or follow the patterns predicted by the mother knows best or the optimal badmotherhood principles. Interactions with novel hosts generated parent-offspring conflicts. Larval survival was higher on native hosts. However, adult generally lived longer on novel hosts. In Cephaloleia beetles, oviposition preferences are usually associated with hosts that increase larval survival, female fecundity, and population growth. In most cases, Cephaloleia oviposition preferences follow the expectations of the mothers knows best principle.

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