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Testing the migration syndrome : Comparative fecundity of migratory and non-migratory nymphaline butterflies

Wiklund, Christer and Friberg, Magne LU (2022) In Ecological Entomology 47(6). p.1061-1067
Abstract

Empirical studies have shown a positive relationship between migration and fecundity, suggesting a ‘migration syndrome’ that also includes delayed reproduction and an extended reproductive lifespan. At the same time, life history theory predicts that the cost of migration should result in lower fecundity because both traits draw from a common resource. We test whether migration is associated with higher fecundity and delayed reproduction in five closely related butterfly species in the Nymphalini tribe. Two of these are migratory, Vanessa cardui and Vanessa atalanta, and three are non-migratory, Aglais urticae, Aglais io, and Polygonia c-album, which appears in a diapausing and a non-diapausing generation. Laboratory experiment of this... (More)

Empirical studies have shown a positive relationship between migration and fecundity, suggesting a ‘migration syndrome’ that also includes delayed reproduction and an extended reproductive lifespan. At the same time, life history theory predicts that the cost of migration should result in lower fecundity because both traits draw from a common resource. We test whether migration is associated with higher fecundity and delayed reproduction in five closely related butterfly species in the Nymphalini tribe. Two of these are migratory, Vanessa cardui and Vanessa atalanta, and three are non-migratory, Aglais urticae, Aglais io, and Polygonia c-album, which appears in a diapausing and a non-diapausing generation. Laboratory experiment of this study demonstrated a higher lifetime fecundity in the non-migratory species A. urticae and A. io, compared with the migratory species. When reproductive output was measured in terms of egg mass over adult female mass, also the non-migratory species P. c-album had a higher reproductive investment than the two migratory species, and the non-diapausing generation had a higher reproductive output than the diapausing generation. All species but P. c-album delayed reproduction until 5–7 days after eclosion/emergence. These results indicate that a migratory lifestyle carries a reproductive cost and suggests that the migratory habit has not resulted in selection for higher fecundity. However, the migratory species are highly fecund in a wider phylogenetic perspective, which leads to the conclusion that rather than selection having selected for high fecundity and delayed reproduction, these traits may be prerequisites for evolving a migratory lifestyle.

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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
dispersal, fecundity, life history trade-offs, migration syndrome, Nymphalidae, voltinism
in
Ecological Entomology
volume
47
issue
6
pages
1061 - 1067
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:85137510859
ISSN
0307-6946
DOI
10.1111/een.13195
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
df679f17-9591-4775-b080-85424754df88
date added to LUP
2022-10-21 14:35:28
date last changed
2024-05-16 20:22:13
@article{df679f17-9591-4775-b080-85424754df88,
  abstract     = {{<p>Empirical studies have shown a positive relationship between migration and fecundity, suggesting a ‘migration syndrome’ that also includes delayed reproduction and an extended reproductive lifespan. At the same time, life history theory predicts that the cost of migration should result in lower fecundity because both traits draw from a common resource. We test whether migration is associated with higher fecundity and delayed reproduction in five closely related butterfly species in the Nymphalini tribe. Two of these are migratory, Vanessa cardui and Vanessa atalanta, and three are non-migratory, Aglais urticae, Aglais io, and Polygonia c-album, which appears in a diapausing and a non-diapausing generation. Laboratory experiment of this study demonstrated a higher lifetime fecundity in the non-migratory species A. urticae and A. io, compared with the migratory species. When reproductive output was measured in terms of egg mass over adult female mass, also the non-migratory species P. c-album had a higher reproductive investment than the two migratory species, and the non-diapausing generation had a higher reproductive output than the diapausing generation. All species but P. c-album delayed reproduction until 5–7 days after eclosion/emergence. These results indicate that a migratory lifestyle carries a reproductive cost and suggests that the migratory habit has not resulted in selection for higher fecundity. However, the migratory species are highly fecund in a wider phylogenetic perspective, which leads to the conclusion that rather than selection having selected for high fecundity and delayed reproduction, these traits may be prerequisites for evolving a migratory lifestyle.</p>}},
  author       = {{Wiklund, Christer and Friberg, Magne}},
  issn         = {{0307-6946}},
  keywords     = {{dispersal; fecundity; life history trade-offs; migration syndrome; Nymphalidae; voltinism}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{6}},
  pages        = {{1061--1067}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Ecological Entomology}},
  title        = {{Testing the migration syndrome : Comparative fecundity of migratory and non-migratory nymphaline butterflies}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/een.13195}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/een.13195}},
  volume       = {{47}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}