4.5 Article

Novel host unmasks heritable variation in plant preference within an insect population

期刊

EVOLUTION
卷 76, 期 11, 页码 2634-2648

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/evo.14608

关键词

Glucosinolates; heritability; Lepidoptera; novel host plant; oviposition preference; sex linkage

资金

  1. Undergraduate Research Opportunities grant from Stanford University
  2. Stanford University Biology Field Studies
  3. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-1450810]
  4. Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory's Graduate Research Fellowship
  5. University of South Carolina

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Introductions of novel plant species can disrupt the resource environment of herbivorous insects, leading to selection for or against the novel host. This study on Pieris macdunnoughii butterflies in the Rocky Mountains found evidence of sex-linked genetic variation in host preference, contrary to previous predictions. The study also suggested that chemicals might not be the primary driver for female choice of host plants.
Introductions of novel plant species can disturb the historical resource environment of herbivorous insects, resulting in strong selection to either adopt or exclude the novel host. However, an adaptive response depends on heritable genetic variation for preference or performance within the targeted herbivore population, and it is unclear how heritability of host-use preference may differ between novel and historical hosts. Pieris macdunnoughii butterflies in the Rocky Mountains lay eggs on the nonnative mustard Thlaspi arvense, which is lethal to their offspring. Heritability analyses revealed considerable sex-linked additive genetic variation in host preference within a population of this butterfly. This was contrary to general predictions about the genetic basis of preference variation, which are hypothesized to be sex linked between populations but autosomal within populations. Evidence of sex linkage disappeared when butterflies were tested on methanol-based chemical extracts, suggesting these chemicals in isolation may not be the primary driver of female choice among available host plants. Although unexpected, evidence for within-population sex-linked genetic variation in preference for T. arvense over native hosts indicates that persistent maladaptive oviposition on this lethal plant must be maintained by alternative evolutionary dynamics such as migration- or drift-selection balance or pleiotropic constraints.

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