Wing Dimorphisms and the Evolution of Migratory Polymorphisms among the Insecta |
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Authors: | ROFF DEREK A; FAIRBAIRN DAPHNE J |
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Institution: | Department of Biology, McGill University Montreal, Quebec H3A 1B1, Canada
Department of Biology, Concordia University Montreal, Quebec H3G 1M8, Canada |
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Abstract: | Many species of insects exhibit wing dimorphism, one morph havingfully developed wings and the other morph having reduced wingsand being incapable of flight. These wing dimorphisms providevisible manifestations of migratory polymorphisms. Since wingedindividuals do not, in principle, have to fly, the existenceof forms with reduced wings suggests that there is a tradeoffbetween flight capability and other fitness components. Comparisonsof the life histories of the fully winged and wing reduced morphsdemonstrate that this tradeoff is most commonly expressed asa decrease in the age of first reproduction and increased fecundityin the morph with reduced wings. Given these tradeoffs, theevolution of wing dimorphism will depend upon its genetic basis,including correlations with other life history components. Areview of the recent literature suggests that the heritabilityof wing morphology is high, and we suggest that this high heritabilitycould be maintained, in part, by antagonistic pleiotropy. In dimorphic species, the winged morph is generally consideredto be the migrant form. However, there are significant correlations,both within and among species, between the proportion of wingedindividuals, the proportion of winged individuals with functionalflight muscles, and the flight propensity of those individuals.This suggests that the proportion of winged individuals andthe propensity of the winged morph to migrate are intimatelyconnected at both the physiological and population level. Therefore,the study of the evolution of wing dimorphism is important notonly in its own right but also as a model of how migratory propensityevolves in monomorphically winged species. |
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