油菜花营养-温度相互作用的种群差异

Anna L. Parker, Joel G. Kingsolver
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引用次数: 0

摘要

寄主植物品质与温度的相互作用会影响植食性昆虫的短期生理速率和生活史性状。这些因素可能因地而异,导致对饮食和温度的局部适应,但很少对种群之间的这些相互作用进行比较。在这项研究中,我们研究了人工饲料的大量营养成分比例如何决定不同温度下来自不同气候区域的两个入侵北美种群的rapae(鳞翅目:Pieridae)幼虫的生长、发育和存活。我们进行了全因子试验,采用三种温度处理(18°C、25°C和32°C)和三种不同蛋白质与碳水化合物比例(低蛋白质、平衡蛋白质和高蛋白)的人工饲料处理。在较低的温度下,饮食对生活史特征的影响更大,但这些影响在种群之间有所不同。在低温条件下,低蛋白饲料处理下,亚热带种群的幼虫存活率降低,而温带种群的幼虫存活率在所有温度和饲料处理下都同样高。总体而言,两种群在低蛋白质比的饲料中表现较差(即消耗、生长和发育速度较慢,蛹质量较小),但温带种群的幼虫在所有温度下对饲料比例变化的敏感性较低。我们的研究结果证实,营养失衡对食草昆虫的生理和生活史影响可能取决于发育温度,并且北美不同地理种群对营养平衡和温度的敏感性存在差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Population divergence in nutrient-temperature interactions in Pieris rapae
The interaction between larval host plant quality and temperature can influence the short-term physiological rates and life-history traits of insect herbivores. These factors can vary locally, resulting in local adaptation in responses to diet and temperature, but the comparison of these interactions between populations is infrequently carried out. In this study, we examine how the macronutrient ratio of an artificial diet determines the larval growth, development, and survival of larval Pieris rapae (Lepidoptera: Pieridae) at different temperatures between two invasive North American populations from different climatic regions. We conducted a fully factorial experiment with three temperature treatments (18°C, 25°C, and 32°C) and three artificial diet treatments varying in terms of the ratio of protein to carbohydrate (low protein, balanced, and high protein). The effects of diet on life-history traits were greater at lower temperatures, but these differed between populations. Larvae from the subtropical population had reduced survival to pupation on the low-protein diet in the cold temperature treatment, whereas larval survival for the temperate population was equally high for all temperature and diet treatments. Overall, both populations performed more poorly (i.e., they showed slower rates of consumption, growth, and development, and had a smaller pupal mass) in the diet with the low protein ratio, but larvae from the temperate population were less sensitive to diet ratio changes at all temperatures. Our results confirm that the physiological and life-history consequences of imbalanced nutrition for insect herbivores may depend on developmental temperatures, and that different geographic populations of P. rapae within North America vary in their sensitivity to nutritional balance and temperature.
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