The mechanisms and adaptations involved in the "obligate" third instar larval diapause of Colias alexandra, a native Rocky Mountain and intermountain region butterfly, are examined. Generally univoltine throughout its distribution, scattered, isolated bivoltine populations occur. Factors influencing continuous development were investigated under laboratory conditions on a single generation of offspring from a univoltine population each year from 1976-1979. If exposed to mean temperatures >24°C during the second instar, a significant number of larvae fail to diapause. These results are interpreted in the context of the actual environmental conditions experienced by the univoltine source population and a bivoltine population. A high degree of individual variability in response to continuous development conditions is shown. Variation in certainty of diapause, within an originally univoltine population, could be the evolutionary starting point for evolving a genuine multivoltine cueing system and provide the mechanism for ecological range expansion.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00389007 | DOI Listing |
Oecologia
September 1987
Graduate Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Division of Biology and Medicine, Brown University, 02912, Providence, RI, USA.
This paper explores two hypotheses about the relationships among predation, thermoregulation, and wing color in butterflies: First, that butterflies are susceptible to predation during thermally marginal periods (e.g., cool weather) when effective thermoregulation and flight are not possible; second, that Pieris butterflies are relatively unpalatable to visual predators, supporting the idea that the white wing pigment of Pieris represents aposematic coloration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOecologia
July 1985
Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Department of Zoology, University of Iowa, 52242, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Patterns of egg distribution and survivorship were examined for six generations (1975-79 and 1981) of a univoltine population of the pierid butterfly Colias alexandra. Unlike some other of the so-called red-egged pierids, there is no evidence of egg-recognition in this Coliadine species. Two distribution patterns were observed: contagious or clumped in 1976-1979, but random in 1981.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOecologia
June 1982
Department of Zoology, University of California, Davis, 95616, Davis, California, USA.
The mechanisms and adaptations involved in the "obligate" third instar larval diapause of Colias alexandra, a native Rocky Mountain and intermountain region butterfly, are examined. Generally univoltine throughout its distribution, scattered, isolated bivoltine populations occur. Factors influencing continuous development were investigated under laboratory conditions on a single generation of offspring from a univoltine population each year from 1976-1979.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOecologia
May 1981
Department of Entomology, University of Kansas, 66045, Lawrence, Kansas, USA.
Key factor analysis techniques were used to examine factors determining the abundance of a population of non-pest Colias. The number of individuals entering each successive life stage in the sample population are summarized in life tables for 1975 to 1979. Survivorship to the adult is a relatively consistent proportionality (-x=1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOecologia
December 1979
The Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, 81224, Crested Butte, Colorado, USA.
The structure of a bivoltine, discrete-generation population of Colias philodice eriphyle, occurring in relatively undisturbed habitat, has been examined by mark-release-recapture techniques. The population's general ecology is briefly discussed. Males eclose before females as in other Colias, and a measure of physical wear on adults is related to age of individuals and to the overall position of a sample in the flight period, again as in other Colias.
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