scholarly journals Female fecundity variation affects reproducibility of experiments on host plant preference and acceptance in a phytophagous insect

2017 ◽  
Vol 284 (1849) ◽  
pp. 20162643 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Schäpers ◽  
Hampus Petrén ◽  
Christopher W. Wheat ◽  
Christer Wiklund ◽  
Magne Friberg

Reproducibility is a scientific cornerstone. Many recent studies, however, describe a reproducibility crisis and call for assessments of reproducibility across scientific domains. Here, we explore the reproducibility of a classic ecological experiment—that of assessing female host plant preference and acceptance in phytophagous insects, a group in which host specialization is a key driver of diversification. We exposed multiple cohorts of Pieris napi butterflies from the same population to traditional host acceptance and preference tests on three Brassicaceae host species. Whereas the host plant rank order was highly reproducible, the propensity to oviposit on low-ranked hosts varied significantly even among cohorts exposed to similar conditions. Much variation could be attributed to among-cohort variation in female fecundity, a trait strongly correlated both to female size and to the size of the nuptial gift a female receives during mating. Small males provide small spermatophores, and in our experiment small females that mated with small males had a disproportionally low propensity to oviposit on low-ranked hosts. Hence, our results provide empirical support to the theoretical prediction that female host utilization is strongly affected by non-genetic, environmental variation, and that such variation can affect the reproducibility of ecological experiments even under seemingly identical conditions.

1996 ◽  
Vol 44 (5) ◽  
pp. 503 ◽  
Author(s):  
MFA Jallow ◽  
MP Zalucki

Using a tethered-insect technique, we investigated within- and between-population variation in the post-alighting host-plant preference and specificity of female Helicoverpa armigera from four populations. No significant difference occurred among populations in host-plant preference. Differences in host-plant preference existed among female moths within a population, and these differences are under genetic control and heritable. Most females ranked maize, sorghum and tobacco highest, followed by cotton varieties DP90 and HG660. The least-preferred plants were cowpea and lucerne. A few females (20%) differed from this general pattern and among each other, and reversed the rank order of host plants. Within a population, individual female moths differed in their host-plant specificity, with some individuals being more generalist than others. Similarly, significant differences occurred in host-plant specificity among populations. The relevance of these findings are discussed in relation to polyphagy in H. armigera.


1978 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 360-368 ◽  
Author(s):  
ELS M. GERRITS‐HEYBROEK ◽  
W. M. HERREBOUT ◽  
SANDRINE A. ULENBERG ◽  
J. T. WIEBES

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