Literature DB >> 18588427

Dependence of phenotypic variance in body size on environmental quality.

Tiit Teder1, Toomas Tammaru, Toomas Esperk.   

Abstract

The recent "overhead threshold" model for optimal age and body size at maturity (Day and Rowe 2002 ) predicts that phenotypic variability in adult body size will be low under inferior environmental quality and will increase with improving conditions. The model is, however, based on a potentially restrictive assumption of a monotone increase of fecundity with increasing body size. On the basis of a numerical model, we show that introducing the concept of maximum adult body size changes the predictions of the model. The dependence of variability in adult body size on environmental quality becomes a concave function with a maximum at intermediate values. Depending on the range of environmental conditions considered, one may therefore expect to observe both increasing and decreasing functions. We test the predictions of our model on a literature-based database of 131 insect species covering all major orders. We demonstrate that, in most species, relative phenotypic variation in body size decreases when environment-specific average of adult body size increases. In the majority of cases at least, such a relationship can be interpreted as a decreased relative variation in better growing conditions. With some potentially meaningful exceptions (e.g., females of capital-breeding insects), the general pattern was largely invariable across different taxa, ecological subdivisions, and sexes.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18588427     DOI: 10.1086/589896

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Nat        ISSN: 0003-0147            Impact factor:   3.926


  7 in total

1.  Sex differences in phenotypic plasticity of a mechanism that controls body size: implications for sexual size dimorphism.

Authors:  R Craig Stillwell; Goggy Davidowitz
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2010-07-07       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Effects of genetics and early-life mild hypoxia on size variation in farmed gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata).

Authors:  Erick Perera; Enrique Rosell-Moll; Fernando Naya-Català; Paula Simó-Mirabet; Josep Calduch-Giner; Jaume Pérez-Sánchez
Journal:  Fish Physiol Biochem       Date:  2020-11-13       Impact factor: 2.794

Review 3.  Sex differences in phenotypic plasticity affect variation in sexual size dimorphism in insects: from physiology to evolution.

Authors:  R Craig Stillwell; Wolf U Blanckenhorn; Tiit Teder; Goggy Davidowitz; Charles W Fox
Journal:  Annu Rev Entomol       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 19.686

4.  Intraspecific body size frequency distributions of insects.

Authors:  E Jeanne Gouws; Kevin J Gaston; Steven L Chown
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-03-30       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Environmental conditions influence allometric patterns in the blow fly, Chrysomya albiceps.

Authors:  M Battán Horenstein; A V Peretti
Journal:  J Insect Sci       Date:  2011       Impact factor: 1.857

6.  Pollinator size and its consequences: Robust estimates of body size in pollinating insects.

Authors:  Liam K Kendall; Romina Rader; Vesna Gagic; Daniel P Cariveau; Matthias Albrecht; Katherine C R Baldock; Breno M Freitas; Mark Hall; Andrea Holzschuh; Francisco P Molina; Joanne M Morten; Janaely S Pereira; Zachary M Portman; Stuart P M Roberts; Juanita Rodriguez; Laura Russo; Louis Sutter; Nicolas J Vereecken; Ignasi Bartomeus
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-02-07       Impact factor: 2.912

7.  Larger fig wasps are more careful about which figs to enter--with good reason.

Authors:  Cong Liu; Da-Rong Yang; Stephen G Compton; Yan-Qiong Peng
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-09-23       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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