4.5 Article

Plasticity in behavioural responses and resistance to temperature stress in Musca domestica

Journal

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR
Volume 99, Issue -, Pages 123-130

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2014.11.003

Keywords

flight; heat resistance; insects; locomotor activity; morphology; thermal adaptation

Funding

  1. Danish Council for Independent Research, Natural Sciences [0602-01916B]
  2. Danish Natural Science Research Council [95095995]
  3. European Community's Seventh Framework Programme [244547]
  4. Aalborg Zoo Conservation Foundation [AZCF 03-04]
  5. Danish Council for Independent Research, Science Technology and Innovation [11-116256]
  6. European Science Foundation's network programme ThermAdapt [3567, 3572]

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Organisms can respond to and cope with stressful environments in a number of ways including behavioural, morphological and physiological adjustments. To understand the role of behavioural traits in thermal adaptations we compared heat resistance, locomotor (walking and flying) activity, flight performance and morphology of three European populations of Musca domestica (Diptera: Muscidae) originating from different thermal conditions (Spain, Switzerland and Denmark) at benign and stressful high temperatures. Spanish flies showed greater heat resistance than Swiss and Danish flies. Similarly, at the stressful high temperature Spanish flies flew the furthest and Danish flies the shortest distance. Neither body size nor wing loading affected flight performance, although flies with narrower wings tended to fly further (wing shape effect). Swiss flies were most active in terms of locomotor activity at the benign temperature, whereas the Spanish flies were able to stay active for longer at the stressful temperature. Population differences in behavioural traits and heat resistance were obtained using flies held for several generations in a laboratory common garden setting; therefore we suggest that exposure to and avoidance of high temperatures under natural conditions has been an important selective agent causing the suggested adaptive differentiation between the populations. (C) 2014 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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