Like mother, like daughter? Phenotypic plasticity, environmental covariation, and heritability of size in a parthenogenetic wasp.

IF 2.1 3区 生物学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Alicia Tovar, Scott Monahan, Trevor Mugoya, Adrian Kristan, Walker Welch, Ryan Dettmers, Camila Arce, Theresa Buck, Michele Ruben, Alexander Rothenberg, Roxane Saisho, Ryan Cartmill, Timothy Skaggs, Robert Reyes, M J Lee, John Obrycki, William Kristan, Arun Sethuraman
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Abstract

Parthenogenetic wasps provide an ideal natural experiment to study the heritability, plasticity, and microevolutionary dynamics of body size. Dinocampus coccinellae (Hymenoptera:Braconidae, Euphorinae) is a solitary, generalist braconid parasitoid wasp that reproduces through thelytokous parthenogenesis, and parasitizes over fifty diverse species of coccinellid ladybeetles worldwide as hosts. Here we designed an experiment with parthenogenetic lines of D. coccinellae presented with three different host ladybeetle species of varying sizes, across multiple generations to investigate heritability, and plasticity of body size measured via a combination of morphometric variables such as thorax width, abdominal width, and wing length in D. coccinellae. We expected positively correlated parent-offspring parasitoid regressions, indicative of heritable size variation, from unilineal (parent and offspring reared on same host species) lines, since these restrict environmental variation in phenotypes. In contrast, because multilineal (parent and offspring reared on different host species) lines would induce phenotypic plasticity of clones reared in varying environments, we expected negatively correlated parent-offspring parasitoid regressions. Our results indicate (1) little heritable variation in body size, (2) strong independence of offspring size on the host environment, (3) small mothers produce larger offspring, and vice versa, independent of host. We then model the evolution of size and host-shifting under a constrained fecundity advantage model of Cope's Law using a Hidden Markov Model, showing that D. coccinellae likely has fitness advantages to maintain plasticity in body size despite parthenogenetic reproduction.

有其母必有其女?孤雌生殖黄蜂体型的表型可塑性、环境共变和遗传力。
孤雌生殖黄蜂为研究体型的遗传性、可塑性和微观进化动力学提供了理想的自然实验。瓢虫小蜂(Dinocampus coccinellae,膜翅目:小蜂科,大黄蜂科)是一种独居的、多面手的小蜂,通过单性生殖进行生殖,并以全世界50多种瓢虫为寄主。本研究以三种不同体型瓢虫为寄主的瓢虫单性生殖系为研究对象,通过胸宽、腹宽、翼长等形态计量变量的组合,研究了瓢虫体型的遗传性和可塑性。我们期望亲代-子代寄生性回归呈正相关,表明单系(亲代和子代在同一寄主物种上饲养)系的遗传大小变化,因为这限制了表型的环境变化。相比之下,由于多系(在不同寄主物种上饲养的亲本和后代)系会诱导在不同环境下饲养的无性系的表型可塑性,我们预计亲本后代的寄生性回归是负相关的。结果表明:(1)体型的遗传变异较小;(2)后代的体型对寄主环境的依赖性较强;(3)小母亲的后代较大,反之亦然,与寄主无关。然后,我们使用隐马尔可夫模型,在柯普定律的约束繁殖力优势模型下,对体型和宿主迁移的进化进行了建模,结果表明D. coccinellae在孤雌生殖的情况下可能具有适应性优势,以保持体型的可塑性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.80%
发文量
152
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: It covers both micro- and macro-evolution of all types of organisms. The aim of the Journal is to integrate perspectives across molecular and microbial evolution, behaviour, genetics, ecology, life histories, development, palaeontology, systematics and morphology.
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