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Plastic changes in head size during juvenile development of the butterfly <Emphasis Type="Italic">Pieris napi</Emphasis>
Authors:Masaaki Ohata  Atsuko Furumoto  Naota Ohsaki
Institution:(1) Laboratory of Insect Ecology, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kitashirakawa-Oiwake cho, Sakyo, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan
Abstract:Among herbivorous insects, the ability to change adaptive traits plastically in response to novel host plants is advantageous for coping with sudden environmental shifts. The host plants in our study were two closely related species, viz., Arabis flagellosa (tougher leaves, i.e., they are physically defended) and A. gemmifera (softer leaves that are physiologically defended). We demonstrated that young larvae of the butterfly Pieris napi are able to plastically change head size during development in response to changes in food plant species. When larvae were fed the physically defended A. flagellosa, the head sizes of third instar larvae emerging from eggs originally collected from leaves of both A. flagellosa and A. gemmifera became identically larger. When larvae fed on the physiologically defended A. gemmifera, the head sizes of third instar larvae emerging from eggs originally collected from leaves of both A. flagellosa and A. gemmifera became identically smaller. When leaves of A. flagellosa were presented to fourth instars reared on A. flagellosa, larvae with larger heads consumed more food than those with smaller heads. In contrast, when leaves of the physiologically defended A. gemmifera were presented to fourth instar larvae reared on A. gemmifera, larvae with smaller heads processed more food than those with larger heads. Hence, larvae of P. napi retain the capacity for adaptive plastic responses to novel host plant species.
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