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Growth rate mediates hidden developmental plasticity of female yellow dung fly reproductive morphology in response to environmental stressors

Walters, Richard J. LU ; Berger, David ; Blanckenhorn, Wolf U. ; Bussière, Luc F. ; Rohner, Patrick T. ; Jochmann, Ralf ; Thüler, Karin and Schäfer, Martin A. (2022) In Evolution and Development 24(44563). p.3-15
Abstract

Understanding how environmental variation influences even cryptic traits is important to clarify the roles of selection and developmental constraints in past evolutionary divergence and to predict future adaptation under environmental change. Female yellow dung flies (Scathophaga stercoraria) typically have three sperm storage compartments (3S), but occasionally four (4S). More spermathecae are thought to be a female adaptation facilitating sperm sorting after mating, but the phenotype is very rare in nature. We manipulated the flies' developmental environment by food restriction, pesticides, and hot temperatures to investigate the nature and extent of developmental plasticity of this trait, and whether spermatheca expression correlates... (More)

Understanding how environmental variation influences even cryptic traits is important to clarify the roles of selection and developmental constraints in past evolutionary divergence and to predict future adaptation under environmental change. Female yellow dung flies (Scathophaga stercoraria) typically have three sperm storage compartments (3S), but occasionally four (4S). More spermathecae are thought to be a female adaptation facilitating sperm sorting after mating, but the phenotype is very rare in nature. We manipulated the flies' developmental environment by food restriction, pesticides, and hot temperatures to investigate the nature and extent of developmental plasticity of this trait, and whether spermatheca expression correlates with measures of performance and developmental stability, as would be expected if 4S expression is a developmental aberration. The spermathecal polymorphism of yellow dung fly females is heritable, but also highly developmentally plastic, varying strongly with rearing conditions. 4S expression is tightly linked to growth rate, and weakly positively correlated with fluctuating asymmetry of wings and legs, suggesting that the production of a fourth spermatheca could be a nonadaptive developmental aberration. However, spermathecal plasticity is opposite in the closely related and ecologically similar Scathophaga suilla, demonstrating that overexpression of spermathecae under developmental stress is not universal. At the same time, we found overall mortality costs as well as benefits of 4S pheno- and genotypes (also affecting male siblings), suggesting that a life history trade-off may potentially moderate 4S expression. We conclude that the release of cryptic genetic variation in spermatheca number in the face of strong environmental variation may expose hidden traits (here reproductive morphology) to natural selection (here under climate warming or food augmentation). Once exposed, hidden traits can potentially undergo rapid genetic assimilation, even in cases when trait changes are first triggered by random errors that destabilize developmental processes.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Evolution and Development
volume
24
issue
44563
pages
3 - 15
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • pmid:35072984
  • scopus:85123478292
ISSN
1520-541X
DOI
10.1111/ede.12396
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Evolution & Development Published by Wiley Periodicals LLC
id
148aa078-d8cb-4220-af4c-80f60bc28012
date added to LUP
2022-02-08 11:45:48
date last changed
2024-06-14 13:26:29
@article{148aa078-d8cb-4220-af4c-80f60bc28012,
  abstract     = {{<p>Understanding how environmental variation influences even cryptic traits is important to clarify the roles of selection and developmental constraints in past evolutionary divergence and to predict future adaptation under environmental change. Female yellow dung flies (Scathophaga stercoraria) typically have three sperm storage compartments (3S), but occasionally four (4S). More spermathecae are thought to be a female adaptation facilitating sperm sorting after mating, but the phenotype is very rare in nature. We manipulated the flies' developmental environment by food restriction, pesticides, and hot temperatures to investigate the nature and extent of developmental plasticity of this trait, and whether spermatheca expression correlates with measures of performance and developmental stability, as would be expected if 4S expression is a developmental aberration. The spermathecal polymorphism of yellow dung fly females is heritable, but also highly developmentally plastic, varying strongly with rearing conditions. 4S expression is tightly linked to growth rate, and weakly positively correlated with fluctuating asymmetry of wings and legs, suggesting that the production of a fourth spermatheca could be a nonadaptive developmental aberration. However, spermathecal plasticity is opposite in the closely related and ecologically similar Scathophaga suilla, demonstrating that overexpression of spermathecae under developmental stress is not universal. At the same time, we found overall mortality costs as well as benefits of 4S pheno- and genotypes (also affecting male siblings), suggesting that a life history trade-off may potentially moderate 4S expression. We conclude that the release of cryptic genetic variation in spermatheca number in the face of strong environmental variation may expose hidden traits (here reproductive morphology) to natural selection (here under climate warming or food augmentation). Once exposed, hidden traits can potentially undergo rapid genetic assimilation, even in cases when trait changes are first triggered by random errors that destabilize developmental processes.</p>}},
  author       = {{Walters, Richard J. and Berger, David and Blanckenhorn, Wolf U. and Bussière, Luc F. and Rohner, Patrick T. and Jochmann, Ralf and Thüler, Karin and Schäfer, Martin A.}},
  issn         = {{1520-541X}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{01}},
  number       = {{44563}},
  pages        = {{3--15}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Evolution and Development}},
  title        = {{Growth rate mediates hidden developmental plasticity of female yellow dung fly reproductive morphology in response to environmental stressors}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ede.12396}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/ede.12396}},
  volume       = {{24}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}