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@article{1c973bb4372d4da1bcc433b456617ec1,
title = "North vs. South: Contrasting patterns in the phenotypic plasticity of the fi rebug Pyrrhocoris apterus (Hemiptera: Pyrrhocoridae) at the latitudinal extremes of its distribution range",
abstract = "In widely distributed insects, some life-history traits are conserved across the whole distribution range and are considered species-specific while other such traits differ geographically. This interplay of geographic variation and phenotypic conservatism is poorly understood even in relatively well-studied model species. Furthermore, a careful study may reveal that conventionally stable traits, such as the lower temperature threshold for development and the sum of degree-days, are both geographically variable and environmentally plastic. We studied how photoperiodic conditions and temperature jointly affect immature development, adult body size and wing polymorphism in two populations of the firebug from the opposite latitudinal margins of this species' range. All the three traits rarely clearly differ under short-day and long-day conditions or between north and south. Instead, we find prevalent temperature-by-photoperiod and temperature-by-origin interactions, which emphasize that it is not only the absolute values of these traits but the degree of their temperature-dependence, or thermal plasticity, that varies in time (in response to seasonal changes in day length) and in space (along latitudinal gradients). These results indicate that caution should be exercised when extrapolating any life-history traits in P. apterus beyond the season when and the location where these were measured. In particular, the use of a constant lower temperature threshold coupled with a constant sum of degree-days is likely to oversimplify the diversity of current and projected phenological patterns in this species.",
keywords = "insect, body size, development, photoperiod, reaction norm, Seasonality, temperature, wing polymorphism",
author = "Dmitry Kutcherov and Lopatina, {Elena B.}",
year = "2022",
month = dec,
doi = "10.14411/eje.2022.048",
language = "English",
volume = "119",
pages = "454–465",
journal = "European Journal of Entomology",
issn = "1210-5759",
publisher = "Czech Academy of Sciences",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - North vs. South: Contrasting patterns in the phenotypic plasticity of the fi rebug Pyrrhocoris apterus (Hemiptera: Pyrrhocoridae) at the latitudinal extremes of its distribution range

AU - Kutcherov, Dmitry

AU - Lopatina, Elena B.

PY - 2022/12

Y1 - 2022/12

N2 - In widely distributed insects, some life-history traits are conserved across the whole distribution range and are considered species-specific while other such traits differ geographically. This interplay of geographic variation and phenotypic conservatism is poorly understood even in relatively well-studied model species. Furthermore, a careful study may reveal that conventionally stable traits, such as the lower temperature threshold for development and the sum of degree-days, are both geographically variable and environmentally plastic. We studied how photoperiodic conditions and temperature jointly affect immature development, adult body size and wing polymorphism in two populations of the firebug from the opposite latitudinal margins of this species' range. All the three traits rarely clearly differ under short-day and long-day conditions or between north and south. Instead, we find prevalent temperature-by-photoperiod and temperature-by-origin interactions, which emphasize that it is not only the absolute values of these traits but the degree of their temperature-dependence, or thermal plasticity, that varies in time (in response to seasonal changes in day length) and in space (along latitudinal gradients). These results indicate that caution should be exercised when extrapolating any life-history traits in P. apterus beyond the season when and the location where these were measured. In particular, the use of a constant lower temperature threshold coupled with a constant sum of degree-days is likely to oversimplify the diversity of current and projected phenological patterns in this species.

AB - In widely distributed insects, some life-history traits are conserved across the whole distribution range and are considered species-specific while other such traits differ geographically. This interplay of geographic variation and phenotypic conservatism is poorly understood even in relatively well-studied model species. Furthermore, a careful study may reveal that conventionally stable traits, such as the lower temperature threshold for development and the sum of degree-days, are both geographically variable and environmentally plastic. We studied how photoperiodic conditions and temperature jointly affect immature development, adult body size and wing polymorphism in two populations of the firebug from the opposite latitudinal margins of this species' range. All the three traits rarely clearly differ under short-day and long-day conditions or between north and south. Instead, we find prevalent temperature-by-photoperiod and temperature-by-origin interactions, which emphasize that it is not only the absolute values of these traits but the degree of their temperature-dependence, or thermal plasticity, that varies in time (in response to seasonal changes in day length) and in space (along latitudinal gradients). These results indicate that caution should be exercised when extrapolating any life-history traits in P. apterus beyond the season when and the location where these were measured. In particular, the use of a constant lower temperature threshold coupled with a constant sum of degree-days is likely to oversimplify the diversity of current and projected phenological patterns in this species.

KW - insect

KW - body size

KW - development

KW - photoperiod

KW - reaction norm

KW - Seasonality

KW - temperature

KW - wing polymorphism

U2 - 10.14411/eje.2022.048

DO - 10.14411/eje.2022.048

M3 - Article

VL - 119

SP - 454

EP - 465

JO - European Journal of Entomology

JF - European Journal of Entomology

SN - 1210-5759

ER -

ID: 102066902