Weak sex-specific evolution of locomotor activity of Sepsis punctum (Diptera: Sepsidae) thermal experimental evolution lines

被引:0
作者
Kjaersgaard, Anders [1 ,2 ,5 ]
Blanckenhorn, Wolf U. [1 ]
Berger, David [1 ,3 ]
Esperk, Toomas [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Zurich, Dept Evolutionary Biol & Environm Studies, Winterthurerstr 190, CH-8057 Zurich, Switzerland
[2] Aarhus Univ, Dept Biol, Ny Munkegade 114-116, DK-8000 Aarhus, Denmark
[3] Uppsala Univ, Evolutionary Biol Ctr, Dept Ecol & Genet, Uppsala, Sweden
[4] Tartu Univ, Inst Ecol & Earth Sci, Juhan Liivi 2, EE-50409 Tartu, Estonia
[5] Aarhus Univ Hosp, Dept Clin Epidemiol, Olof Palmes 43-45, DK-8200 Aarhus N, Denmark
基金
瑞士国家科学基金会;
关键词
Body size; Climate change; Environmental stress; Heat resistance; Locomotor behaviour; Thermal niche; Thermal selection; REACTION NORMS; DROSOPHILA-MELANOGASTER; CLIMATE-CHANGE; DUNG FLY; PERFORMANCE CURVES; SIZE DIMORPHISM; HEAT-STRESS; BODY-SIZE; TEMPERATURE; SELECTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.jtherbio.2023.103680
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Elevated temperatures are expected to rise beyond what the physiology of many organisms can tolerate. Behavioural responses facilitating microhabitat shifts may mitigate some of this increased thermal selection on physiology, but behaviours are themselves mediated by physiology, and any behavioural response may trade-off against other fitness-related activities. We investigated whether experimental evolution in different thermal regimes (Cold: 15 degrees C; Hot: 31 degrees C; Intergenerational fluctuation 15/31 degrees C; Control: 23 degrees C) resulted in genetic differentiation of standard locomotor activity in the dung fly Sepsis punctum. We assessed individual locomotor performance, an integral part of most behavioral repertoires, across eight warm temperatures from 24 degrees C to 45 degrees C using an automated device. We found no evidence for generalist-specialist trade-offs (i.e. changes in the breadth of the performance curve) for this trait. Instead, at the warmest assay temperatures hot-selected flies showed somewhat higher maximal performance than all other, especially cold-selected flies, overall more so in males than females. Yet, the flies' temperature optimum was not higher than that of the cold-selected flies, as expected under the 'hotter-is-better' hypothesis. Maximal locomotor performance merely weakly increased with body size. These results suggest that thermal performance curves are unlikely to evolve as an entity according to theory, and that locomotor activity is a trait of limited use in revealing thermal adaptation.
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页数:8
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