Literature DB >> 27549202

Environmental Adaptation, Phenotypic Plasticity, and Associative Learning in Insects: The Desert Locust as a Case Study.

Patrício M V Simões1, Swidbert R Ott2, Jeremy E Niven3.   

Abstract

The ability to learn and store information should be adapted to the environment in which animals operate to confer a selective advantage. Yet the relationship between learning, memory, and the environment is poorly understood, and further complicated by phenotypic plasticity caused by the very environment in which learning and memory need to operate. Many insect species show polyphenism, an extreme form of phenotypic plasticity, allowing them to occupy distinct environments by producing two or more alternative phenotypes. Yet how the learning and memories capabilities of these alternative phenotypes are adapted to their specific environments remains unknown for most polyphenic insect species. The desert locust can exist as one of two extreme phenotypes or phases, solitarious and gregarious. Recent studies of associative food-odor learning in this locust have shown that aversive but not appetitive learning differs between phases. Furthermore, switching from the solitarious to the gregarious phase (gregarization) prevents locusts acquiring new learned aversions, enabling them to convert an aversive memory formed in the solitarious phase to an appetitive one in the gregarious phase. This conversion provides a neuroecological mechanism that matches key changes in the behavioral environments of the two phases. These findings emphasize the importance of understanding the neural mechanisms that generate ecologically relevant behaviors and the interactions between different forms of behavioral plasticity.
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27549202     DOI: 10.1093/icb/icw100

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Integr Comp Biol        ISSN: 1540-7063            Impact factor:   3.326


  4 in total

1.  Molecular Ecological Basis of Grasshopper (Oedaleus asiaticus) Phenotypic Plasticity under Environmental Selection.

Authors:  Xinghu Qin; Kun Hao; Jingchuan Ma; Xunbing Huang; Xiongbing Tu; Md Panna Ali; Barry R Pittendrigh; Guangchun Cao; Guangjun Wang; Xiangqun Nong; Douglas W Whitman; Zehua Zhang
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2017-10-10       Impact factor: 4.566

2.  A β-carotene-binding protein carrying a red pigment regulates body-color transition between green and black in locusts.

Authors:  Meiling Yang; Yanli Wang; Qing Liu; Zhikang Liu; Feng Jiang; Huimin Wang; Xiaojiao Guo; Jianzhen Zhang; Le Kang
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2019-01-08       Impact factor: 8.140

3.  Feeding Dimorphism in a Mycophagous Nematode, Bursaphelenchus sinensis.

Authors:  Natsumi Kanzaki; Taisuke Ekino; Robin M Giblin-Davis
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-09-27       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  Polyphenism of visual and chemical secondary sexually-selected wing traits in the butterfly Bicyclus anynana: How different is the intermediate phenotype?

Authors:  Doriane Muller; Benjamin Elias; Laurent Collard; Christophe Pels; Marie-Jeanne Holveck; Caroline M Nieberding
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-11-18       Impact factor: 3.240

  4 in total

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