Morphological and physiological determinants of local adaptation to climate in Rocky Mountain butterflies
Abstract
Flight is a central determinant of fitness in butterflies and other insects, but it is restricted to a limited range of body temperatures. To achieve these body temperatures, butterflies use a combination of morphological, behavioural and physiological mechanisms. Here, we used common garden (without direct solar radiation) and reciprocal transplant (full solar radiation) experiments in the field to determine the thermal sensitivity of flight initiation for two species of Colias butterflies along an elevation gradient in the southwestern Rocky Mountains. The mean body temperature for flight initiation in the field was lower (24-26°C) than indicated by previous studies (28-30°C) in these species. There were small but significant differences in thermal sensitivity of flight initiation between species; high-elevation Colias meadii initiated flight at a lower mean body temperature than lower-elevation Colias eriphyle. Morphological differences (in wing melanin and thoracic setae) drive body temperature differences between species and contributed strongly to differences in the time and probability of flight and air temperatures at flight initiation. Our results suggest that differences both in thermal sensitivity (15% contribution) and in morphology (85% contribution) contribute to the differences in flight initiation between the two species in the field. Understanding these differences, which influence flight performance and fitness, aids in forecasting responses to climate change.
Local Knowledge Graph (15 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Geographic differences and microevolutionary changes in thermal sensitivity of butterfly larvae in response to climate
Thermoregulation and flight in Colias butterflies: elevational patterns and mechanistic limitations
Mechanistic constraints and optimality models: thermoregulatory strategies in Colias butterflies
An examination of synchrony between insect emergence and flowering in Rocky Mountain meadows.
Data from: Effects of increased flight on the energetics and life history of the butterfly Speyeria mormonia
Data from: Two-year bee, or not two-year bee? How voltinism is affected by temperature and season length in a high-elevation solitary bee
Colorado?s Alpine Ecosystem Health ? A Case Study on San Juan, Sawatch, and West Elk Mountains
Colorado's Natural Heritage: Rare and Imperiled Animals, Plants, and Plant Communities
Biologically Significant Areas in Gunnison County Colorado
Cited 25 times
References (46)
6 in Knowledge Hub, 40 external
