Growth, stress, and acclimation responses to fluctuating temperatures in field and domesticated populations of Manduca sexta

Abstract Diurnal fluctuations in temperature are ubiquitous in terrestrial environments, and insects and other ectotherms have evolved to tolerate or acclimate to such fluctuations. Few studies have examined whether ectotherms acclimate to diurnal temperature fluctuations, or how natural and domesti...

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Main Authors: Joel G. Kingsolver, M. Elizabeth Moore, Christina A. Hill, Kate E. Augustine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-12-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6991
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spelling doaj-a19c2ac75ed247dba140bdf16437b0902021-06-04T07:10:37ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582020-12-011024139801398910.1002/ece3.6991Growth, stress, and acclimation responses to fluctuating temperatures in field and domesticated populations of Manduca sextaJoel G. Kingsolver0M. Elizabeth Moore1Christina A. Hill2Kate E. Augustine3Department of Biology University of North Carolina Chapel Hill NC USADepartment of Biology University of North Carolina Chapel Hill NC USADepartment of Biology University of North Carolina Chapel Hill NC USADepartment of Biology University of North Carolina Chapel Hill NC USAAbstract Diurnal fluctuations in temperature are ubiquitous in terrestrial environments, and insects and other ectotherms have evolved to tolerate or acclimate to such fluctuations. Few studies have examined whether ectotherms acclimate to diurnal temperature fluctuations, or how natural and domesticated populations differ in their responses to diurnal fluctuations. We examine how diurnally fluctuating temperatures during development affect growth, acclimation, and stress responses for two populations of Manduca sexta: a field population that typically experiences wide variation in mean and fluctuations in temperature, and a laboratory population that has been domesticated in nearly constant temperatures for more than 300 generations. Laboratory experiments showed that diurnal fluctuations throughout larval development reduced pupal mass for the laboratory but not the field population. The differing effects of diurnal fluctuations were greatest at higher mean temperature (30°C): Here diurnal fluctuations reduced pupal mass and increased pupal development time for the laboratory population, but had little effect for the field population. We also evaluated how mean and fluctuations in temperature during early larval development affected growth rate during the final larval instar as a function of test temperature. At an intermediate (25°C) mean temperature, both the laboratory and field population showed a positive acclimation response to diurnal fluctuations, in which subsequent growth rate was significantly higher at most test temperatures. In contrast at higher mean temperature (30°C), diurnal fluctuations significantly reduced subsequent growth rate at most test temperatures for the laboratory population, but not for the field population. These results suggest that during domestication in constant temperatures, the laboratory population has lost the capacity to tolerate or acclimate to high and fluctuating temperatures. Population differences in acclimation capacity in response to temperature fluctuations have not been previously demonstrated, but they may be important for understanding the evolution of reaction norms and performance curves.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6991acclimationfluctuating temperaturesgrowthlaboratory adaptationreaction normsstress
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joel G. Kingsolver
M. Elizabeth Moore
Christina A. Hill
Kate E. Augustine
spellingShingle Joel G. Kingsolver
M. Elizabeth Moore
Christina A. Hill
Kate E. Augustine
Growth, stress, and acclimation responses to fluctuating temperatures in field and domesticated populations of Manduca sexta
Ecology and Evolution
acclimation
fluctuating temperatures
growth
laboratory adaptation
reaction norms
stress
author_facet Joel G. Kingsolver
M. Elizabeth Moore
Christina A. Hill
Kate E. Augustine
author_sort Joel G. Kingsolver
title Growth, stress, and acclimation responses to fluctuating temperatures in field and domesticated populations of Manduca sexta
title_short Growth, stress, and acclimation responses to fluctuating temperatures in field and domesticated populations of Manduca sexta
title_full Growth, stress, and acclimation responses to fluctuating temperatures in field and domesticated populations of Manduca sexta
title_fullStr Growth, stress, and acclimation responses to fluctuating temperatures in field and domesticated populations of Manduca sexta
title_full_unstemmed Growth, stress, and acclimation responses to fluctuating temperatures in field and domesticated populations of Manduca sexta
title_sort growth, stress, and acclimation responses to fluctuating temperatures in field and domesticated populations of manduca sexta
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Abstract Diurnal fluctuations in temperature are ubiquitous in terrestrial environments, and insects and other ectotherms have evolved to tolerate or acclimate to such fluctuations. Few studies have examined whether ectotherms acclimate to diurnal temperature fluctuations, or how natural and domesticated populations differ in their responses to diurnal fluctuations. We examine how diurnally fluctuating temperatures during development affect growth, acclimation, and stress responses for two populations of Manduca sexta: a field population that typically experiences wide variation in mean and fluctuations in temperature, and a laboratory population that has been domesticated in nearly constant temperatures for more than 300 generations. Laboratory experiments showed that diurnal fluctuations throughout larval development reduced pupal mass for the laboratory but not the field population. The differing effects of diurnal fluctuations were greatest at higher mean temperature (30°C): Here diurnal fluctuations reduced pupal mass and increased pupal development time for the laboratory population, but had little effect for the field population. We also evaluated how mean and fluctuations in temperature during early larval development affected growth rate during the final larval instar as a function of test temperature. At an intermediate (25°C) mean temperature, both the laboratory and field population showed a positive acclimation response to diurnal fluctuations, in which subsequent growth rate was significantly higher at most test temperatures. In contrast at higher mean temperature (30°C), diurnal fluctuations significantly reduced subsequent growth rate at most test temperatures for the laboratory population, but not for the field population. These results suggest that during domestication in constant temperatures, the laboratory population has lost the capacity to tolerate or acclimate to high and fluctuating temperatures. Population differences in acclimation capacity in response to temperature fluctuations have not been previously demonstrated, but they may be important for understanding the evolution of reaction norms and performance curves.
topic acclimation
fluctuating temperatures
growth
laboratory adaptation
reaction norms
stress
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6991
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