Two genetically differentiated host strains of fall armyworm were reared on their own and each other's host plants, rice and corn, to determine whether they were physiologically adapted to their natural hosts and whether they exhibited genetically based differences in development. Larval host had a greater impact on development in the rice strain than in the corn strain, indicating that physiology could have facilitated specialization in one strain but not the other. Consequently, behavioral mechanisms are also likely to be important in the maintenance of host specificity. Comparisons between strains indicated significant differences in one trait, the rate at which larvae gained weight. Because this character had consistently high heritabilities, genetic differentiation in development is indicated. An analysis of genotype-by-environment interactions within each strain detected significant interactions for three of five traits, suggesting that genotypic performance on one host was not indicative of performance on the other. Each strain thus exhibited genetic variation that would facilitate host-associated divergence and adaptation if coupled with a mechanism that reduced gene flow between hosts. Finally, significant genetic correlations between several characters were detected when strains were reared on their natural hosts but not when they were reared on nonnatural hosts. Apparently, feeding on novel hosts caused developmental uncoupling of characters. Release from genetic constraints could provide a mechanism for physiological adjustments to newly occupied habitats.
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