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Geographic variation in life cycles : Local adaptation and ecological genetics in a temperate butterfly

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  • Additional Information
    • Publication Information:
      Stockholms universitet, Zoologiska institutionen
      Department of Zoology, Stockholm University
    • Publication Date:
      2020
    • Collection:
      Stockholm University: Publications (DiVA)
    • Abstract:
      Conditions in nature change with the seasons, necessitating seasonal adaptations that synchronize the life cycles of organisms with their surroundings. Such regulatory adaptations must vary between populations to track local variation in climate and seasonality; this local adaptation is facilitated by locally specific seasonal cues, but may be hampered by gene flow and genetic history. For populations of temperate insects, two central features of adaptation to local climate are voltinism, the yearly number of generations; and diapause, the state of arrested development and suppressed metabolism in which most temperate insects spend winter. Delaying diapause allows for an additional generation to be produced within the same year, but this is only adaptive if the season is sufficiently long to safely accommodate such a life cycle. Hence, selection to express a locally adaptive voltinism should drive divergence between populations in diapause regulation and associated life history traits. In this thesis, I investigate variation in voltinism and life cycle regulation in a set of populations of the butterfly Pararge aegeria. Population-level variation in seasonal plasticity was tested in two sets of experiments. The first (Paper I) focused on photoperiodic plasticity during the growing season, and revealed considerable differences between populations in diapause induction and developmental reaction norms. Mechanistic modeling based on the laboratory results indicated that differences in voltinism are actively maintained by these genetic differences. Next, I tested the idea that shorter diapause may help populations achieve higher voltinism through earlier emergence in the spring (Paper II). This idea was not supported; instead, populations differed in a manner that suggests that diapause duration is selected upon by the need to avoid premature development under warm autumn conditions. The genetic background of seasonal adaptation in these populations was also explored. Phylogeographic structures inferred from ...
    • File Description:
      application/pdf
    • Online Access:
      http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-176993
    • Rights:
      info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
    • Accession Number:
      edsbas.8BB6DA16