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Innate Preference Hierarchies Coupled with Adult Experience, Rather Than Larval Imprinting or Transgenerational Acclimation, Determine Host Plant Use in

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Journal Ecol Evol
Date 2021 Jan 13
PMID 33437426
Citations 2
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Abstract

The evolution of host range drives diversification in phytophagous insects, and understanding the female oviposition choices is pivotal for understanding host specialization. One controversial mechanism for female host choice is Hopkins' host selection principle, where females are predicted to increase their preference for the host species they were feeding upon as larvae. A recent hypothesis posits that such larval imprinting is especially adaptive in combination with anticipatory transgenerational acclimation, so that females both allocate and adapt their offspring to their future host. We study the butterfly , for which previous evidence suggests that females prefer to oviposit on host individuals of similar nitrogen content as the plant they were feeding upon as larvae, and where the offspring show higher performance on the mother's host type. We test the hypothesis that larval experience and anticipatory transgenerational effects influence female host plant acceptance (no-choice) and preference (choice) of two host plant species ( and ) of varying nitrogen content. We then test the offspring performance on these hosts. We found no evidence of larval imprinting affecting female decision-making during oviposition, but that an adult female experience of egg laying in no-choice trials on the less-preferred host slightly increased the propensity to oviposit on in subsequent choice trials. We found no transgenerational effects on female host acceptance or preference, but negative transgenerational effects on larval performance, because the offspring of females that had developed on as larvae grew slower on both hosts, and especially on . Our results suggest that among host species, preferences are guided by hard-wired preference hierarchies linked to species-specific host traits and less affected by larval experience or transgenerational effects, which may be more important for females evaluating different host individuals of the same species.

Citing Articles

Behavioral and Physiological Plasticity Provides Insights into Molecular Based Adaptation Mechanism to Strain Shift in .

Hafeez M, Li X, Ullah F, Zhang Z, Zhang J, Huang J Int J Mol Sci. 2021; 22(19).

PMID: 34638623 PMC: 8508907. DOI: 10.3390/ijms221910284.


Innate preference hierarchies coupled with adult experience, rather than larval imprinting or transgenerational acclimation, determine host plant use in .

Petren H, Gloder G, Posledovich D, Wiklund C, Friberg M Ecol Evol. 2021; 11(1):242-251.

PMID: 33437426 PMC: 7790653. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7018.

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