Why Have Multiple Plastic Responses? Interactions between Color Change and Heat Avoidance Behavior in Battus philenor Larvae
Having multiple plastic responses to a change in the environment, such as increased temperature, can be adaptive for two major reasons: synergy (the plastic responses perform better when expressed simultaneously) or complementarity (each plastic response provides a greater net benefit in a different...
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6242132017-06-21T03:00:32Z Why Have Multiple Plastic Responses? Interactions between Color Change and Heat Avoidance Behavior in Battus philenor Larvae Nielsen, Matthew E. Papaj, Daniel R. Univ Arizona, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol phenotypic plasticity temperature color behavior functional integration Battus philenor Having multiple plastic responses to a change in the environment, such as increased temperature, can be adaptive for two major reasons: synergy (the plastic responses perform better when expressed simultaneously) or complementarity (each plastic response provides a greater net benefit in a different environmental context). We investigated these hypotheses for two forms of temperature-induced plasticity of Battus philenor caterpillars in southern Arizona populations: color change (from black to red at high temperatures) and heat avoidance behavior (movement from host to elevated refuges at high host temperatures). Field assays using aluminum models showed that the cooling effect of the red color is greatly reduced in a refuge position relative to that on a host. Field assays with live caterpillars demonstrated that refuge seeking is much more important for survival under hot conditions than coloration; however, in those assays, red coloration reduced the need to seek refuges. Our results support the complementarity hypothesis: refuge seeking facilitates survival during daily temperature peaks, while color change reduces the need to leave the host over longer warm periods. We propose that combinations of rapid but costly short-term behavioral responses and slow but efficient long-term morphological responses may be common when coping with temperature change. 2017-06 Article Why Have Multiple Plastic Responses? Interactions between Color Change and Heat Avoidance Behavior in Battus philenor Larvae 2017, 189 (6):657 The American Naturalist 0003-0147 1537-5323 28514633 10.1086/691536 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/624213 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/624213 The American Naturalist en http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/691536 © 2017 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved. UNIV CHICAGO PRESS |
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en |
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phenotypic plasticity temperature color behavior functional integration Battus philenor |
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phenotypic plasticity temperature color behavior functional integration Battus philenor Nielsen, Matthew E. Papaj, Daniel R. Why Have Multiple Plastic Responses? Interactions between Color Change and Heat Avoidance Behavior in Battus philenor Larvae |
description |
Having multiple plastic responses to a change in the environment, such as increased temperature, can be adaptive for two major reasons: synergy (the plastic responses perform better when expressed simultaneously) or complementarity (each plastic response provides a greater net benefit in a different environmental context). We investigated these hypotheses for two forms of temperature-induced plasticity of Battus philenor caterpillars in southern Arizona populations: color change (from black to red at high temperatures) and heat avoidance behavior (movement from host to elevated refuges at high host temperatures). Field assays using aluminum models showed that the cooling effect of the red color is greatly reduced in a refuge position relative to that on a host. Field assays with live caterpillars demonstrated that refuge seeking is much more important for survival under hot conditions than coloration; however, in those assays, red coloration reduced the need to seek refuges. Our results support the complementarity hypothesis: refuge seeking facilitates survival during daily temperature peaks, while color change reduces the need to leave the host over longer warm periods. We propose that combinations of rapid but costly short-term behavioral responses and slow but efficient long-term morphological responses may be common when coping with temperature change. |
author2 |
Univ Arizona, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol |
author_facet |
Univ Arizona, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol Nielsen, Matthew E. Papaj, Daniel R. |
author |
Nielsen, Matthew E. Papaj, Daniel R. |
author_sort |
Nielsen, Matthew E. |
title |
Why Have Multiple Plastic Responses? Interactions between Color Change and Heat Avoidance Behavior in Battus philenor Larvae |
title_short |
Why Have Multiple Plastic Responses? Interactions between Color Change and Heat Avoidance Behavior in Battus philenor Larvae |
title_full |
Why Have Multiple Plastic Responses? Interactions between Color Change and Heat Avoidance Behavior in Battus philenor Larvae |
title_fullStr |
Why Have Multiple Plastic Responses? Interactions between Color Change and Heat Avoidance Behavior in Battus philenor Larvae |
title_full_unstemmed |
Why Have Multiple Plastic Responses? Interactions between Color Change and Heat Avoidance Behavior in Battus philenor Larvae |
title_sort |
why have multiple plastic responses? interactions between color change and heat avoidance behavior in battus philenor larvae |
publisher |
UNIV CHICAGO PRESS |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/624213 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/624213 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT nielsenmatthewe whyhavemultipleplasticresponsesinteractionsbetweencolorchangeandheatavoidancebehaviorinbattusphilenorlarvae AT papajdanielr whyhavemultipleplasticresponsesinteractionsbetweencolorchangeandheatavoidancebehaviorinbattusphilenorlarvae |
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