Article
 

Evolving while invading: rapid adaptive evolution in juvenile development time for a biological control organism colonizing a high-elevation environment

Público Deposited

Conteúdo disponível para baixar

Baixar PDF
https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/gf06g3474

Descriptions

Attribute NameValues
Creator
Abstract
  • We report evidence of adaptive evolution in juvenile development time on a decadal timescale for the cinnabar moth Tyria jacobaeae (Lepidoptera: Arctiidae) colonizing new habitats and hosts from the Willamette Valley to the Coast Range and Cascades Mountains in Oregon. Four lines of evidence reveal shorter egg to pupa juvenile development times evolved in the mountains, where cooler temperatures shorten the growing season: (i) field observations showed that the mountain populations have shorter phenological development; (ii) a common garden experiment revealed genetic determination of phenotypic differences in juvenile development time between Willamette Valley and mountain populations correlated with the growing season; (iii) a laboratory experiment rearing offspring from parental crosses within and between Willamette Valley and Cascades populations demonstrated polygenic inheritance, high heritability, and genetic determination of phenotypic differences in development times; and (iv) statistical tests that exclude random processes (founder effect, genetic drift) in favor of natural selection as explanations for observed differences in phenology. These results support the hypothesis that rapid adaptation to the cooler mountain climate occurred in populations established from populations in the warmer valley climate. Our findings should motivate regulators to require evaluation of evolutionary potential of candidate biological control organisms prior to release.
  • Keywords: phenology, heritability, Tyria jacobaeae, natural selection, quantitative trait, contemporary evolution, development time, Senecio triangularis
License
Resource Type
DOI
Date Available
Date Issued
Citation
  • McEvoy, P. B., Higgs, K. M., Coombs, E. M., Karaçetin, E. and Ann Starcevich, L. (2012), Evolving while invading: rapid adaptive evolution in juvenile development time for a biological control organism colonizing a high-elevation environment. Evolutionary Applications, 5: 524–536. doi: 10.1111/j.1752-4571.2012.00278.x
Journal Title
Journal Volume
  • 5
Journal Issue/Number
  • 5
Academic Affiliation
Declaração de direitos
Funding Statement (additional comments about funding)
  • OSU College of Agricultural Sciences and the OSU Agricultural Research Foundation funded this research.
Publisher
Language
Replaces

Relações

Parents:

This work has no parents.

Itens