Genetic variation for parental effects on the propensity to gregarise in <it>Locusta migratoria</it>

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Environmental parental effects can have important ecological and evolutionary consequences, yet little is known about genetic variation among populations in the plastic responses of offspring phenotypes to parental environmental cond...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Foucart Antoine, Augé-Sabatier Arnaud, Estoup Arnaud, Chapuis Marie-Pierre, Lecoq Michel, Michalakis Yannis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2008-02-01
Series:BMC Evolutionary Biology
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/8/37
id doaj-67a831ef3b284669b549070b1db59fa3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-67a831ef3b284669b549070b1db59fa32021-09-02T14:17:30ZengBMCBMC Evolutionary Biology1471-21482008-02-01813710.1186/1471-2148-8-37Genetic variation for parental effects on the propensity to gregarise in <it>Locusta migratoria</it>Foucart AntoineAugé-Sabatier ArnaudEstoup ArnaudChapuis Marie-PierreLecoq MichelMichalakis Yannis<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Environmental parental effects can have important ecological and evolutionary consequences, yet little is known about genetic variation among populations in the plastic responses of offspring phenotypes to parental environmental conditions. This type of variation may lead to rapid phenotypic divergence among populations and facilitate speciation. With respect to density-dependent phenotypic plasticity, locust species (Orthoptera: family Acrididae), exhibit spectacular developmental and behavioural shifts in response to population density, called phase change. Given the significance of phase change in locust outbreaks and control, its triggering processes have been widely investigated. Whereas crowding within the lifetime of both offspring and parents has emerged as a primary causal factor of phase change, less is known about intraspecific genetic variation in the expression of phase change, and in particular in response to the parental environment. We conducted a laboratory experiment that explicitly controlled for the environmental effects of parental rearing density. This design enabled us to compare the parental effects on offspring expression of phase-related traits between two naturally-occurring, genetically distinct populations of <it>Locusta migratoria </it>that differed in their historical patterns of high population density outbreak events.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We found that locusts from a historically outbreaking population of <it>L. migratoria </it>expressed parentally-inherited density-dependent phase changes to a greater degree than those from a historically non-outbreaking population.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Because locusts from both populations were raised in a common environment during our experiment, a genetically-based process must be responsible for the observed variation in the propensity to express phase change. This result emphasizes the importance of genetic factors in the expression of phase traits and calls for further investigations on density-dependent parental effects in locust phase change. More population samples with different outbreak histories need to be analyzed to demonstrate that differences in propensity to gregarise evolve because of different outbreak histories.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/8/37
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Foucart Antoine
Augé-Sabatier Arnaud
Estoup Arnaud
Chapuis Marie-Pierre
Lecoq Michel
Michalakis Yannis
spellingShingle Foucart Antoine
Augé-Sabatier Arnaud
Estoup Arnaud
Chapuis Marie-Pierre
Lecoq Michel
Michalakis Yannis
Genetic variation for parental effects on the propensity to gregarise in <it>Locusta migratoria</it>
BMC Evolutionary Biology
author_facet Foucart Antoine
Augé-Sabatier Arnaud
Estoup Arnaud
Chapuis Marie-Pierre
Lecoq Michel
Michalakis Yannis
author_sort Foucart Antoine
title Genetic variation for parental effects on the propensity to gregarise in <it>Locusta migratoria</it>
title_short Genetic variation for parental effects on the propensity to gregarise in <it>Locusta migratoria</it>
title_full Genetic variation for parental effects on the propensity to gregarise in <it>Locusta migratoria</it>
title_fullStr Genetic variation for parental effects on the propensity to gregarise in <it>Locusta migratoria</it>
title_full_unstemmed Genetic variation for parental effects on the propensity to gregarise in <it>Locusta migratoria</it>
title_sort genetic variation for parental effects on the propensity to gregarise in <it>locusta migratoria</it>
publisher BMC
series BMC Evolutionary Biology
issn 1471-2148
publishDate 2008-02-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Environmental parental effects can have important ecological and evolutionary consequences, yet little is known about genetic variation among populations in the plastic responses of offspring phenotypes to parental environmental conditions. This type of variation may lead to rapid phenotypic divergence among populations and facilitate speciation. With respect to density-dependent phenotypic plasticity, locust species (Orthoptera: family Acrididae), exhibit spectacular developmental and behavioural shifts in response to population density, called phase change. Given the significance of phase change in locust outbreaks and control, its triggering processes have been widely investigated. Whereas crowding within the lifetime of both offspring and parents has emerged as a primary causal factor of phase change, less is known about intraspecific genetic variation in the expression of phase change, and in particular in response to the parental environment. We conducted a laboratory experiment that explicitly controlled for the environmental effects of parental rearing density. This design enabled us to compare the parental effects on offspring expression of phase-related traits between two naturally-occurring, genetically distinct populations of <it>Locusta migratoria </it>that differed in their historical patterns of high population density outbreak events.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We found that locusts from a historically outbreaking population of <it>L. migratoria </it>expressed parentally-inherited density-dependent phase changes to a greater degree than those from a historically non-outbreaking population.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Because locusts from both populations were raised in a common environment during our experiment, a genetically-based process must be responsible for the observed variation in the propensity to express phase change. This result emphasizes the importance of genetic factors in the expression of phase traits and calls for further investigations on density-dependent parental effects in locust phase change. More population samples with different outbreak histories need to be analyzed to demonstrate that differences in propensity to gregarise evolve because of different outbreak histories.</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/8/37
work_keys_str_mv AT foucartantoine geneticvariationforparentaleffectsonthepropensitytogregariseinitlocustamigratoriait
AT augesabatierarnaud geneticvariationforparentaleffectsonthepropensitytogregariseinitlocustamigratoriait
AT estouparnaud geneticvariationforparentaleffectsonthepropensitytogregariseinitlocustamigratoriait
AT chapuismariepierre geneticvariationforparentaleffectsonthepropensitytogregariseinitlocustamigratoriait
AT lecoqmichel geneticvariationforparentaleffectsonthepropensitytogregariseinitlocustamigratoriait
AT michalakisyannis geneticvariationforparentaleffectsonthepropensitytogregariseinitlocustamigratoriait
_version_ 1721174565016567808