1. Temperature‐induced egg size variation and its effects on successive life stages in the carabid beetle Notiophilus biguttatus were examined.2. In the laboratory, across temperature regimes, egg size and number were inversely related; number of eggs and total egg mass were higher, but egg size was smaller at high temperatures.3. Food intake rate was shown not to be involved in the temperature effect on egg size.4. Within the higher temperature regimes, among females, egg size was negatively correlated with number of eggs and with total egg mass.5. Data on egg mortality and egg development time did not explain why at low temperature eggs were larger than at high temperature.6. Larvae hatching from eggs produced at a low temperature were heavier than larvae from eggs produced at a high temperature, irrespective of temperature during development.7. In a prolonged outdoor experiment (January – July), encompassing the main breeding period of N. biguttatus, egg size decreased and both egg production rate and total egg mass increased in the course of the experiment.8. In the field, an effect of seasonal change in temperature on adult body size was found; teneral beetles that had their juvenile period early in the season were larger than those that had their juvenile period later in the season.9. The results of the study suggest a mechanistic explanation in which the egg size response to temperature follows from a difference in temperature sensitivity between two processes in oogenesis; adaptiveness of the temperature response was not clarified.
A highly informative set of 16 microsatellite markers was used to fingerprint 695 apple accessions from eight Dutch collections. Among the total sample, 475 different genotypes were distinguished based on multi-locus microsatellite variation, revealing a potential redundancy within the total sample of 32%. The majority of redundancies were found between collections, rather than within collections. No single collection covered the total observed diversity well, as each collection consisted of about 50% of unique accessions. These findings reflected the fact that most collection holders focus on common Dutch varieties, as well as on regionspecific diversity. Based on the diversity patterns observed, maintenance of genetic resources by a network of co-operating collection holders, rather than by collecting the total diversity in a single collection appears to be an efficient approach.Comparison of microsatellite and passport data showed that for many accessions the marker data did not provide support for the registered variety names. Verification of accessions showed that discrepancies between passport and molecular data were largely due to documentation and phenotypic determination errors. With the help of the marker data the varietal names of 45 accessions could be corrected. Microsatellite genotyping of apple appears to be an efficient tool in the management of collections and in variety identification. The development of a marker database was considered relevant as a reference instrument in variety identification and as a source of information about thus far unexplored diversity that could be of interest in the development of new apple varieties.
We studied the allocation of total egg mass to size and number in the carabid beetle Notiophilus biguttatus F. at several temperature and day length regimes. Eggs increase in number and decrease in size with increasing (constant) temperature. Day length interacts with temperature: at short day the effect of temperature on size and number of eggs is weaker than at long day. In diurnally fluctuating temperature regimes, egg size is affected disproportionately by the high temperature period. All treatments, however, are similar in affecting number and size of eggs in an opposite direction. Consequently, egg size is explained to a high degree by egg production rate. The relationship between size and number of eggs among treatments is furthermore characterized by a decrease in egg size with an increase in total egg mass production. Within treatments, rate of egg production and egg size are negatively correlated among females in the low-temperature groups but not in the high-temperature groups; the correlations among females are also characterized by a decrease in egg size, with an increase in total egg mass production. Hence, possible trade-offs between size and number of eggs are masked by phenotypic variation in reproductive effort. The observations enable us to propose a simple conceptual model that explains the within-treatment correlation by the same causal factor as the negative relationship among treatment means.
Recently two species of carabid beetle were accidentally introduced onto the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia. Both species are carnivorous and flightless. One of the species, Trechisibus antarcticus, is locally very abundant and in the process of invading the coastal lowland area, where the endemic herbivorous beetle Hydromedion sparsutum (Perimylopidae) is common. Field samples showed the abundance of the endemic species to be much lower, and its adult body size to be larger, in carabid-infested locations than in carabid-free locations. The sample data allowed us to estimate the growth rate of the H. sparsutum larvae and to reconstruct the most likely life-cycle of both species. A laboratory experiment showed a high mortality for the first three (out of six) larval instars of H. sparsutum in groups which had been subjected to predation by T. antarcticus. The duration of the period during which the larvae are vulnerable to predation was shown in a growth experiment to depend on food type. Quantitative and qualitative aspects of the interaction between the introduced predator and the endemic prey, and conditions which allowed the former to invade are discussed.
Three clones of Folsomia candida from different locations in Europe were compared in four experiments investigating genetic and phenotypic correlations between life-history traits. The first three experiments focused on the effects of food type, clone and temperature on traits associated with the first clutch. Differences in clutch size between clones and treatments were almost completely attributable to body size. Clones differed in length of the juvenile period, but the difference decreased at low temperatures. Age and weight at first reproduction were negatively correlated in the food type experiment and positively correlated in the temperature experiment, an often-encountered result for which no general explanation is as yet available. In the temperature experiment egg size variation was considerable, and was highest at low temperatures. The fourth experiment, with two clones at two feeding levels, aimed at finding trade-offs, in particular between reproduction and survival. It was hypothesized that higher fecundity led to increased scenescence through a higher metabolic rate. The trade-off was clearly present among the clones: one combined fast growth, late reproduction and high lifetime fecundity with lower survival, while in the other the relation between these traits was opposite. The proposed mechanism, however, was not confirmed, as no difference in metabolic rate was found. The effect of food level was too small to result in significant differences in the life-history traits in either of the clones.
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