4.5 Article

Trade-off between flight capability and reproduction in Acridoidea (Insecta: Orthoptera)

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 23, Pages 16849-16861

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8317

Keywords

Acridoidea; gonadosomatic index; reproduction; trade-off; wing type

Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [GK202101003, GK202107011]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31872217]

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The study found that male Acridoidea with relatively long wings have higher flight muscle weight, while females with relatively short wings have higher gonadosomatic index. Individuals with long wings have higher flight capability but lower reproduction, supporting the trade-off between flight and reproduction in Acridoidea.
In many insect taxa, there is a well-established trade-off between flight capability and reproduction. The wing types of Acridoidea exhibit extremely variability from full length to complete loss in many groups, thus, provide a good model for studying the trade-off between flight and reproduction. In this study, we completed the sampling of 63 Acridoidea species, measured the body length, wing length, body weight, flight muscle weight, testis and ovary weight, and the relative wing length (RWL), relative flight muscle weight (RFW), and gonadosomatic index (GSI) of different species were statistically analyzed. The results showed that there were significant differences in RWL, RFW, and GSI among Acridoidea species with different wing types. RFW of long-winged species was significantly higher than that of short-winged and wingless species (p < .01), while GSI of wingless species was higher than that of long-winged and short-winged species. The RWL and RFW had a strong positive correlation in species with different wing types (correlation coefficient r = .8344 for male and .7269 for female, and p < .05), while RFW was strong negatively correlated with GSI (r = -.2649 for male and -.5024 for female, and p < .05). For Acridoidea species with wing dimorphism, males with relatively long wings had higher RFW than that of females with relatively short wings, while females had higher GSI. Phylogenetic comparative analysis showed that RWL, RFW, and GSI all had phylogenetic signals and phylogenetic dependence. These results revealed that long-winged individuals are flight capable at the expense of reproduction, while short-winged and wingless individuals cannot fly, but has greater reproductive output. The results support the trade-off between flight and reproduction in Acridoidea.

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