| Literature DB >> 29622925 |
Zachary Emberts1, Christine W Miller2, Daniel Kiehl1, Colette M St Mary1.
Abstract
Autotomy, self-induced limb loss, is an extreme trait observed throughout the animal kingdom; lizards drop their tails, crickets release their legs, and crabs drop their claws. These repeated evolutionary origins suggest that autotomy is adaptive. Yet, we do not have a firm understanding of the selective pressures that promote and maintain this extreme trait. Although multiple adaptive hypotheses exist, research has generally focused on autotomy's adaptive value as a form of predator escape. However, autotomy could also be selected to reduce the cost of an injured limb, which we investigate here. Previously, this alternative hypothesis has been challenging to directly test because when an injury occurs on an autotomizable limb, that limb is almost always dropped (i.e., autotomy is behaviorally fixed within populations). Recently, however, we have identified a species, Narnia femorata (Insecta: Hemiptera: Coreidae), where some individuals autotomize limbs in response to injury, but some do not. This natural variation allowed us to investigate both the survival costs of retaining an injured limb and the benefits of autotomizing it. In this study, we find a positive association between autotomizing injured limbs and survival, thereby quantifying a new and likely widespread benefit of autotomy-reducing the cost of injury.Entities:
Keywords: Coreidae; Hemiptera; autotomy; injury; natural selection; regeneration
Year: 2017 PMID: 29622925 PMCID: PMC5873245 DOI: 10.1093/beheco/arx063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Ecol ISSN: 1045-2249 Impact factor: 2.671
A taxonomic overview of autotomy, including anecdotal evidence of autotomy in response to injury
| Phyla | Group | Autotomizable appendage | Autotomy to escape | Autotomy in response to injury | Citations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coelenterata | Jellyfish | Tentacles | Yes | — | Bickell-Page & Mackie 1991 |
| Mollusca | Nudibranchs | Cerata | Yes | — | Marín & Ros 2004 |
| Bivalves | Tentacles | Yes | — | Donovan et al 2004 | |
| Squid | Tentacles | Yes | — | Bush 2012 | |
| Annelida | Earthworms | Tail | Yes | — | Fiore et al 2004 |
| Arthropoda | Spiders | Legs, pedipalps | Yes | Yes | Savory 1928, Punzo 1997 |
| Scorpions | Tail | Yes | — | Mattoni et al 2015 | |
| Crabs | Claws, legs | Yes | Yes | McVean 1973, McVean 1982 | |
| Centipedes | Legs | Yes | Yes | Lewis 1981 | |
| Crickets | Legs | Yes | — | Bateman and Fleming 2006a | |
| True bugs | Legs | Yes | Yes | Luscher 1948, Emberts et al 2016 | |
| Echinodermata | Sea stars | Arms | Yes | Yes | Glynn 1982 |
| Brittlestars | Arms | Yes | — | Wilkie 2001 | |
| Chordata | Salamanders | Tail | Yes | Yes | Wake and Dresner 1967 |
| Lizards | Tail | Yes | Yes | Elwood et al 2012; Congdon et al. 1974 | |
| Mice | Tail skin | Yes | — | Shargal et al 1999 |
Figure 1A juvenile Narnia femorata.
Figure 2The right hind leg of a juvenile N. femorata, depicting the location of each injury site.
Figure 3Experiment 1—contrast of treatments to investigate the effects of autotomy and injury on the proportion of individuals (±SE) surviving to adulthood.
Experiment 1—developmental differences between autotomy, injury, and our control (no autotomy/no injury)
|
| df |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Days until adulthood | |||
| Autotomy vs. control | 0.285 | 1 | 0.593 |
| Injury vs. control | 1.265 | 1 | 0.261 |
| Autotomy vs. injury | 3.37 | 1 | 0.067 |
| Terminal body size (PW) | |||
| Autotomy vs. control | 1.2 | 1 | 0.274 |
| Injury vs. control | 0.992 | 1 | 0.319 |
| Autotomy vs. injury | 0.223 | 1 | 0.637 |
PW, pronotal width.
Figure 4Experiment 1—effect of injury location on autotomy and survival. (a) Depicts the proportion of individuals (±SE) that survived based on their behavioral decision to autotomize or retain their injured limb for each injury location. (b) Illustrates the variation in the proportion of individuals (±SE) that autotomized at each injury location. Individuals in the injury 3 treatment had a significantly lower propensity to autotomize then those in the injury 1 and injury 2 treatments. Furthermore, autotomizing limbs injured at the injury 3 location did not increase survival.
Experiment 1—developmental differences between self-autotomizing and retaining an injured limb
|
| df |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Days until adulthood | |||
| Autotomy | 9.085 | 1 | 0.003 |
| Injury location | 3.445 | 2 | 0.179 |
| Autotomy × injury location | 16.404 | 1 | <0.001 |
| Terminal body size (PW) | |||
| Autotomy | 3.554 | 1 | 0.059 |
| Injury location | 1.350 | 2 | 0.509 |
| Autotomy × injury location | 4.171 | 1 | 0.041 |
We investigated how injury location, the decision to autotomize, and their interaction affected the number of days it took a juvenile to reach adulthood and terminal body size. Means and standard errors are reported in Supplementary Table 2. PW, pronotal width.
Figure 5Experiment 2—proportion of individuals (±SE) that survived in each treatment based on their autotomy behavior. In treatments where autotomy was experimentally induced, individuals did not have a behavioral choice. However, when only injury was induced, an individual could have self-autotomized or retained (no autotomy) the injured limb.