Forum for Science, Industry and Business
  • Sponsored by:
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
Search our Site:

Topic (optional):

 

Home Reports Life Sciences Content

Butterflies & the hormonal basis of interactions between life histories & morphology

next article
11.05.2004

 


In an article published in the May 2004 issue of The American Naturalist, Wilte G. Zijlstra (University of Leiden), Marc J. Steigenga (University of Leiden), P. Bernhardt Koch (University of Erlangen), Bas Zwaan (University of Leiden), and Paul M. Brakefield (University of Leiden) explore the relationship between hormones and environmental adaptation in butterflies.


Hormones are crucial for the development of organisms. In the tropical butterfly, Bicyclus anynana, ecdysone affects eyespot size on the ventral wings and developmental time, both important fitness components. This is reflected in a strong genetic correlation between the traits, and there is evidence that ecdysone is the mechanism for this connection: high levels of ecdysone result in large eyespots and fast development, while low lead to small eyespots and slow development. They selected simultaneously on these two traits and succeeded not only in making more extreme phenotypes, but also in breaking the connection and obtaining phenotypes with large eyespots and slow development, or with small eyespots with fast development. They examined ecdysone physiology to show that both the sensitivity to ecdsyone and the titers of the hormone are only affected by selection on developmental time. This result is important because it shows that in the field the adaptation in life history to changing environments is not hampered by a hormonal mechanism that controls several traits. It further shows that the developmental system is flexible enough to allow evolution in directions opposing the correlation: phenotypes can change by genetic variation in other, independent, pathways.

Carrie Olivia Adams | Source: EurekAlert!
Further information: www.journals.uchicago.edu/AN

next article

More articles from Life Sciences:

nachricht Hope for Alzheimer’s Patients?
04.12.2008 | Angewandte Chemie International Edition

nachricht New "Control Knobs" for Stem Cells Identified
04.12.2008 | Tufts University

B2B Search

Product / Service
Company / Organisation

Latest News

New solutions enhancing road safety developed in Finland

04.12.2008 | Transportation and Logistics

Why is the Earth’s mantle conductive?

04.12.2008 | Earth Sciences

ESA satellites flying in formation

04.12.2008 | Physics and Astronomy

Event News

Dublin to host Europe’s largest interdisciplinary science conference in 2012

28.11.2008 | Event News

ECREA Barcelona 2008

28.11.2008 | Event News

The Automobile – The Transition from Energy Guzzler to Power Supplier

20.11.2008 | Event News