4.5 Article

Concerted evolution of body mass, cell size and metabolic rate among carabid beetles

期刊

JOURNAL OF INSECT PHYSIOLOGY
卷 132, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2021.104272

关键词

Allometry; Body size; Carabidae; Metabolism; Metabolic scaling; Optimal cell size; Sexual dimorphism

资金

  1. National Science Centre in Poland [2011/02/A/NZ8/00064]
  2. Jagiellonian University [DS/BINoZ/INoS/757/2016, DS/MND/WBINoZ/INoS/22/2012, DS/MND/WBINoZ/INoS/29/2013]
  3. NSC [2016/21/B/NZ8/00303]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study compared body mass, resting metabolic rate, and cell size in different tissues of males and females of 19 Carabidae beetle species using phylogenetically informed comparisons. It was found that larger species or larger sexes consistently possessed larger cells in different tissues, which indicated coordination of cell size changes, and these changes contributed to evolutionary and sex differences in body mass. Additionally, beetles with larger cells exhibited lower mass-specific metabolic rates, supporting existing hypotheses about the fitness consequences of cell size changes.
Alterations in cell number and size are apparently associated with the body mass differences between species and sexes, but we rarely know which of the two mechanisms underlies the observed variance in body mass. We used phylogenetically informed comparisons of males and females of 19 Carabidae beetle species to compare body mass, resting metabolic rate, and cell size in the ommatidia and Malpighian tubules. We found that the larger species or larger sex (males or females, depending on the species) consistently possessed larger cells in the two tissues, indicating organism-wide coordination of cell size changes in different tissues and the contribution of these changes to the origin of evolutionary and sex differences in body mass. The species or sex with larger cells also exhibited lower mass-specific metabolic rates, and the interspecific mass scaling of metabolism was negatively allometric, indicating that large beetles with larger cells spent relatively less energy on maintenance than small beetles. These outcomes also support existing hypotheses about the fitness consequences of cell size changes, postulating that the low surface-to-volume ratio of large cells helps decrease the energetic demand of maintaining ionic gradients across cell membranes. Analyses with and without phylogenetic information yielded similar results, indicating that the observed patterns were not biased by shared ancestry. Overall, we suggest that natural selection does not operate on each trait independently and that the linkages between concerted cell size changes in different tissues, body mass and metabolic rate should thus be viewed as outcomes of correlational selection.

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