Search results for "plantaginis"

showing 10 items of 53 documents

Temporal relationship between genetic and warning signal variation in the aposematic wood tiger moth (Parasemia plantaginis).

2013

Many plants and animals advertise unpalatability through warning signals in the form of colour and shape. Variation in warning signals within local populations is not expected because they are subject to directional selection. However, mounting evidence of warning signal variation within local populations suggests that other selective forces may be acting. Moreover, different selective pressures may act on the individual components of a warning signal. At present, we have a limited understanding about how multiple selection processes operate simultaneously on warning signal components, and even less about their temporal and spatial dynamics. Here, we examined temporal variation of several w…

EstoniaGenetic MarkersMaleAposematismMothsSignalDNA MitochondrialSpatio-Temporal AnalysisGene FrequencyParasemia plantaginisGeneticsAnimalsWings AnimalSelection GeneticEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)FinlandCell NucleusWingbiologyDirectional selectionEcologyPigmentationGenetic VariationSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationVariation (linguistics)Genetics PopulationPhenotypeEvolutionary biologyGenetic structureta1181Microsatellite RepeatsMolecular ecology
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Changes in predator community structure shifts the efficacy of two warning signals in Arctiid moths

2013

Summary 1. Polymorphism in warning coloration is puzzling because positive frequency-dependent selection by predators is expected to promote monomorphic warning signals in defended prey. 2. We studied predation on the warning-coloured wood tiger moth (Parasemia plantaginis )b y using artificial prey resembling white and yellow male colour morphs in five separate populations with different naturally occurring morph frequencies. 3. We tested whether predation favours one of the colour morphs over the other and whether that is influenced either by local, natural colour morph frequencies or predator community composition. 4. We found that yellow specimens were attacked less than white ones rega…

EstoniaMaleFood ChainPolymorphism GeneticbiologyPigmentationTigerEcologyFrequency-dependent selectionCommunity structureAposematismMothsbiology.organism_classificationBiotaPredationSpatial heterogeneitySongbirdsScotlandParasemia plantaginisPredatory BehaviorAnimalsAnimal Science and ZoologyPredatorFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Animal Ecology
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Insect immunity: oral exposure to a bacterial pathogen elicits free radical response and protects from a recurring infection

2014

Background: Previous exposure to a pathogen can help organisms cope with recurring infection. This is widely recognised in vertebrates, but increasing occasions are also being reported in invertebrates where this phenomenon is referred to as immune priming. However, the mechanisms that allow acquired pathogen resistance in insects remain largely unknown. Results: We studied the priming of bacterial resi stance in the larvae of the tiger moth, Parasemia plantaginis using two gram-negative bacteria, a pathogenic Serratia marcescens and a non-pathogenic control, Escherichia coli. Asublethaloraldoseof S. marcescens provided the larvae with effective protection against an otherwise lethal septic…

Gram-negative bacteriaimmune primingDefence mechanismsBacterial resistanceMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesImmune systemAntibiotic resistanceImmunityParasemia plantaginisimmunological loiteringPathogenSerratia marcescensEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyinsect immunityreactive oxygen species0303 health sciencesbiology030306 microbiologyResearchImmunological loiteringfungibacterial resistancebiology.organism_classificationGram-negativegram-negativeInsect immunitySerratia marcescensImmunologyparasemia plantaginisParasemia plantaginisAnimal Science and ZoologyImmune primingReactive oxygen speciesFrontiers in Zoology
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Predator Mixes and the Conspicuousness of Aposematic Signals

2003

Conspicuous warning signals of unprofitable prey are a defense against visually hunting predators. They work because predators learn to associate unprofitability with bright coloration and because strong signals are detectable and memorable. However, many species that can be considered defended are not very conspicuous; they have weak warning signals. This phenomenon has previously been ignored in models and experiments. In addition, there is significant within- and among-species variation among predators in their search behavior, in their visual, cognitive, and learning abilities, and in their resistance to defenses. In this article we explore the effects of variable predators on models th…

InsectaEcologyFrequency-dependent selectionColorAposematismLearning abilitiesBiologybiology.organism_classificationModels BiologicalPredationBirdsParasemia plantaginisPredatory BehaviorCrypsisAnimalsApostatic selectionPredatorEcosystemEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsThe American Naturalist
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To quiver or to shiver: increased melanization benefits thermoregulation, but reduces warning signal efficacy in the wood tiger moth

2013

Melanin production is often considered costly, yet beneficial for thermoregulation. Studies of variation in melanization and the opposing selective forces that underlie its variability contribute greatly to understanding natural selection. We investigated whether melanization benefits are traded off with predation risk to promote observed local and geographical variation in the warning signal of adult male wood tiger moths ( Parasemia plantaginis ). Warning signal variation is predicted to reduce survival in aposematic species. However, in P. plantaginis , male hindwings are either yellow or white in Europe, and show continuous variation in melanized markings that cover 20 to 90 per cent o…

MaleFood ChainAposematismMothsGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyPredationParasemia plantaginisAnimalsWings AnimalAnimal communicationSelection GeneticResearch ArticlesGeneral Environmental ScienceMelaninsSignal variationNatural selectionGeographyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyPigmentationTigerEcologyShiveringGeneral MedicineThermoregulationbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionAnimal CommunicationEuropeta1181General Agricultural and Biological SciencesBody Temperature RegulationProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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Colour polymorphism torn apart by opposing positive frequency-dependent selection, yet maintained in space.

2015

Summary Polymorphic warning signals in aposematic species are enigmatic because predator learning and discrimination should select for the most common coloration, resulting in positive frequency‐dependent survival selection. Here, we investigated whether differential mating success could create sufficiently strong negative frequency‐dependent selection for rare morphs to explain polymorphic (white and yellow) warning coloration in male wood tiger moths (Parasemia plantaginis). We conducted an experiment in semi‐natural conditions where we estimated mating success for both white and yellow male moths under three different morph frequencies. Contrary to expectations, mating success was positi…

MaleFrequency-dependent selectionColorAposematismBiologyMothsSexual Behavior AnimalParasemia plantaginisAnimalsMatingPredatorreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)FinlandPolymorphism GeneticEcologyPigmentationfungibiology.organism_classificationFixation (population genetics)Evolutionary biologySexual selectionAnimal Science and ZoologyFemaleGenetic FitnessThe Journal of animal ecology
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DIET QUALITY AFFECTS WARNING COLORATION INDIRECTLY: EXCRETION COSTS IN A GENERALIST HERBIVORE

2009

Aposematic herbivores are under selection pressure from their host plants and predators. Although many aposematic herbivores exploit plant toxins in their own secondary defense, dealing with these harmful compounds might underlay costs. We studied whether the allocation of energy to detoxification and/or sequestration of host plant defense chemicals trades off with warning signal expression. We used a generalist aposematic herbivore Parasemia plantaginis (Arctiidae), whose adults and larvae show extensive phenotypic and genetic variation in coloration. We reared larvae from selection lines for small and large larval warning signals on Plantago lanceolata with either low or high concentratio…

MaleHerbivoreLarvaPlantagobiologyfungiColorGenetic VariationZoologyAposematismMothsbiology.organism_classificationGeneralist and specialist speciesDietPredationParasemia plantaginisBotanyGeneticsAnimalsFemaleChemical defenseGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution
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Environment-mediated morph-linked immune and life-history responses in the aposematic wood tiger moth

2012

1. Warning signals are expected to evolve towards conspicuousness and monomorphism, and thereby hamper the evolution of multiple colour morphs. Here, we test fitness responses to different rearing densities to explain colour polymorphism in aposematic wood tiger moth (Parasemia plantaginis) males. 2. We used larval lines sired by white or yellow adult males selected for small or large melanization patterns of coloration. We reared these selected lines either solitarily (favourable conditions) or in aggregations (challenged conditions), and followed their performance to adult stage. We tested whether differences in larval density affected life-history traits, adult melanin expression, adult …

MaleZoologyAposematismEnvironmentMothsBiologyMelaninParasemia plantaginisHemolymphAnimalsWings AnimalAdult stageEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMelaninsPopulation DensityLarvaPigmentationEcologyfungibiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionImmunity InnatePupaAnimal ecologyLarvaAnimal Science and ZoologyGenetic FitnessJournal of Animal Ecology
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Trade-off between warning signal efficacy and mating success in the wood tiger moth

2011

The coloration of species can have multiple functions, such as predator avoidance and sexual signalling, that directly affect fitness. As selection should favour traits that positively affect fitness, the genes underlying the trait should reach fixation, thereby preventing the evolution of polymorphisms. This is particularly true for aposematic species that rely on coloration as a warning signal to advertise their unprofitability to predators. Nonetheless, there are numerous examples of aposematic species showing remarkable colour polymorphisms. We examined whether colour polymorphism in the wood tiger moth is maintained by trade-offs between different functions of coloration. In Finland, m…

Malegenetic structuresField experimentZoologyColorAposematismBiologyMothsTrade-offGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyPredationParasemia plantaginisAnimalsSelection GeneticResearch ArticlesGeneral Environmental ScienceGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyTigerEcologyGeneral MedicineMating Preference Animalbiology.organism_classificationAnimal CommunicationSexual selectionTraitta1181FemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesProceedings of the Royal Society B - Biological Sciences
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Genetic colour variation visible for predators and conspecifics is concealed from humans in a polymorphic moth

2022

The definition of colour polymorphism is intuitive: genetic variants express discretely coloured phenotypes. This classification is, however, elusive as humans form subjective categories or ignore differences that cannot be seen by human eyes. We demonstrate an example of a 'cryptic morph' in a polymorphic wood tiger moth (Arctia plantaginis), a phenomenon that may be common among well-studied species. We used pedigree data from nearly 20,000 individuals to infer the inheritance of hindwing colouration. The evidence supports a single Mendelian locus with two alleles in males: WW and Wy produce the white and yy the yellow hindwing colour. The inheritance could not be resolved in females as t…

Malevaroitusvärigenetic structuresColorMothsgenotyyppitäpläsiilikäspolymorphismMultispectral imagingAposematismhavainnointimultispectral imagingAnimalsHumansaposematismPolymorphismArctia plantaginismuuntelu (biologia)Wood tiger mothEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPolymorphism GeneticPigmentationwood tiger mothdiscriminant analysisDiscriminant analysisPhenotype1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyFemalefenotyyppi
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