1999
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.1999.0492
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Slaves of the environment: the movement of herbivorous insects in relation to their ecology and genotype

Abstract: The majority of insect species do not show an innate behavioural migration, but rather populations expand into favourable new habitats or contract away from unfavourable ones by random changes of spatial scale. Over the past 50 years, the scienti¢c fascination with dramatic long-distance and directed mass migratory events has overshadowed the more universal mode of population movement, involving much smaller stochastic displacement during the lifetime of the insects concerned. This may be limiting our understa… Show more

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Cited by 87 publications
(88 citation statements)
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References 184 publications
(216 reference statements)
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“…Genetic differentiation, even at small geographical distances, is not rare in aphids (Loxdale, 1990;Loxdale et al, 1993;Martínez-Torres et al, 1997;Sunnucks et al, 1997;Simon et al, 1999) and consequently aphid migration may be more limited than previously thought (Van Emdem et al, 1969;Taylor, 1977;Robert, 1988;Hales et al, 1997). However, it should be noted that local differentiation does not mean that intense migration and long-distance flights do not occur in aphids, but rather that long-distance migration may be rare or that the success rate of migration may be low (Loxdale et al, 1993;Loxdale and Lushai, 1999). The degree of geographical differentiation may depend on the species considered: the differentiation observed in M. persicae appears to be larger than that found in other aphid species.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Genetic differentiation, even at small geographical distances, is not rare in aphids (Loxdale, 1990;Loxdale et al, 1993;Martínez-Torres et al, 1997;Sunnucks et al, 1997;Simon et al, 1999) and consequently aphid migration may be more limited than previously thought (Van Emdem et al, 1969;Taylor, 1977;Robert, 1988;Hales et al, 1997). However, it should be noted that local differentiation does not mean that intense migration and long-distance flights do not occur in aphids, but rather that long-distance migration may be rare or that the success rate of migration may be low (Loxdale et al, 1993;Loxdale and Lushai, 1999). The degree of geographical differentiation may depend on the species considered: the differentiation observed in M. persicae appears to be larger than that found in other aphid species.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Butterfly species, like many phytophagous insects, are limited by the distribution of their larval host plants (Bernays & Chapman 1994;Loxdale & Lushai 1999). Host acceptance and selection are determined by a wide variety of ecological and physiological factors (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unlike other well-studied butterfly mimicry systems, such as Heliconius, these three mimetic species also have different larval host plant requirements than their respective models (Opler et al 2004). Since the geographical distribution of the host species plays a large role in determining the geographical distribution of a phytophagous insect species (Bernays & Chapman 1994;Loxdale & Lushai 1999), disjunctions in the geographical distributions of model and mimic phytophagous insects may arise due to differences in larval host plant requirements. Mimetic herbivorous insects may exist in locations without their respective model, if hosts are available for the mimetic but not the model species.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The direct effects of temperature and drought on insects are likely to vary among species depending on the sensitivity of individual growth rates to increase temperatures [7], the life-stage at which they experience high temperatures and drought [3,26,42], their adaptation to warm, dry environments and climate extremes [27,67], and their capacity to escape unfavourable environmental conditions [58].…”
Section: Direct Effects Of Drought and Heat On Insect Performancesmentioning
confidence: 99%