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Onset of Oviposition Triggers Abrupt Reduction in Migratory Flight Behavior and Flight Muscle in the Female Beet Webworm, Loxostege sticticalis
PloS ONE
  • Yunxia Cheng, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences
  • Lizhi Luo, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences
  • Thomas W. Sappington, U.S. Department of Agriculture
  • Xingfu Jiang, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences
  • Lei Zhang, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences
  • Andrei N. Frolov, All-Russian Institute for Plant Protection
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
11-28-2016
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0166859
Abstract

Flight and reproduction are usually considered as two life history traits that compete for resources in a migratory insect. The beet webworm, Loxostege sticticalis L., manages the costs of migratory flight and reproduction through a trade-off in timing of these two life history traits, where migratory behavior occurs during the preoviposition period. To gain insight into how migratory flight and reproduction are coordinated in the female beet webworm, we conducted experiments beginning at the end of the preoviposition period. We used flight mills to test whether flight performance and supportive flight musculature and fuel are affected by the number of eggs oviposited, or by the age of mated and unmated females after onset of oviposition by the former. The results showed that flight distance, flight velocity, flight duration, and flight muscle mass decreased abruptly at the onset of oviposition, compared to that of virgin females of the same age which did not change over the next 7 d. These results indicate that onset of oviposition triggers a decrease in flight performance and capacity in female beet webworms, as a way of actively managing reallocation of resources away from migratory flight and into egg production. In addition to the abrupt switch, there was a gradual, linear decline in flight performance, flight muscle mass, and flight fuel relative to the number of eggs oviposited. The histolysis of flight muscle and decrease of triglyceride content indicate a progressive degradation in the ability of adults to perform additional migratory flights after onset of oviposition. Although the results show that substantial, albeit reduced, long-duration flights remain possible after oviposition begins, additional long-distance migratory flights probably are not launched after the initiation of oviposition.

Comments

This article is published as Cheng, Yunxia, Lizhi Luo, Thomas W. Sappington, Xingfu Jiang, Lei Zhang, and Andrei N. Frolov. "Onset of Oviposition Triggers Abrupt Reduction in Migratory Flight Behavior and Flight Muscle in the Female Beet Webworm, Loxostege sticticalis." PloS one 11, no. 11 (2016): e0166859. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0166859.

Rights
This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication.
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Yunxia Cheng, Lizhi Luo, Thomas W. Sappington, Xingfu Jiang, et al.. "Onset of Oviposition Triggers Abrupt Reduction in Migratory Flight Behavior and Flight Muscle in the Female Beet Webworm, Loxostege sticticalis" PloS ONE Vol. 11 Iss. 11 (2016) p. e0166859
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/thomas_sappington/95/