Seasonal plasticity in morphology and metabolism differs between migratory North American and resident Costa Rican monarch butterflies
Tenger-Trolander, Ayşe; Julick, Cole R.; Lu, Wei; Green, Delbert André; Montooth, Kristi L.; Kronforst, Marcus R.
2023-02
Citation
Tenger-Trolander, Ayşe ; Julick, Cole R.; Lu, Wei; Green, Delbert André ; Montooth, Kristi L.; Kronforst, Marcus R. (2023). "Seasonal plasticity in morphology and metabolism differs between migratory North American and resident Costa Rican monarch butterflies." Ecology and Evolution (2): n/a-n/a.
Abstract
Environmental heterogeneity in temperate latitudes is expected to maintain seasonally plastic life-history strategies that include the tuning of morphologies and metabolism that support overwintering. For species that have expanded their ranges into tropical latitudes, it is unclear the extent to which the capacity for plasticity will be maintained or will erode with disuse. The migratory generations of the North American (NA) monarch butterfly Danaus plexippus lead distinctly different lives from their summer generation NA parents and their tropical descendants living in Costa Rica (CR). NA migratory monarchs postpone reproduction, travel thousands of kilometers south to overwinter in Mexico, and subsist on little food for months. Whether recently dispersed populations of monarchs such as those in Costa Rica, which are no longer subject to selection imposed by migration, retain ancestral seasonal plasticity is unclear. To investigate the differences in seasonal plasticity, we reared the NA and CR monarchs in summer and autumn in Illinois, USA, and measured the seasonal reaction norms for aspects of morphology and metabolism related to flight. NA monarchs were seasonally plastic in forewing and thorax size, increasing wing area and thorax to body mass ratio in autumn. While CR monarchs increased thorax mass in autumn, they did not increase the area of the forewing. NA monarchs maintained similar resting and maximal flight metabolic rates across seasons. However, CR monarchs had elevated metabolic rates in autumn. Our findings suggest that the recent expansion of monarchs into habitats that support year-round breeding may be accompanied by (1) the loss of some aspects of morphological plasticity as well as (2) the underlying physiological mechanisms that maintain metabolic homeostasis in the face of temperature heterogeneity.Environmental heterogeneity in temperate latitudes is expected to maintain seasonally plastic life-history strategies that include the tuning of morphologies and metabolism that support overwintering. Whether recently dispersed populations of monarch butterflies, such as those living in Costa Rica, retain ancestral seasonal plasticity is unclear. We investigated the differences in seasonal plasticity by rearing North American and Costa Rican monarchs in summer and autumn in Illinois, USA, and measured the seasonal reaction norms for aspects of morphology and metabolism related to flight.Publisher
Princeton University Press Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
ISSN
2045-7758 2045-7758
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