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Dryad

Data from: Dissecting the contributions of plasticity and local adaptation to the phenology of a butterfly and its host plants

Cite this dataset

Phillimore, Albert B.; Stålhandske, Sandra; Smithers, Richard J.; Rodolphe, Bernard (2012). Data from: Dissecting the contributions of plasticity and local adaptation to the phenology of a butterfly and its host plants [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.733d9

Abstract

Phenology affects the abiotic and biotic conditions that an organism encounters and consequently its fitness. For populations of high latitude species, spring phenology often occurs earlier in warmer years and regions. Here we apply a novel approach to decompose spatiotemporal covariation between spring temperature and the phenology of two flowering plants, Cardamine pratensis and Alliara petiolata, and a Lepidopteran herbivore, Anthocharis cardamines, across the UK, into the contributions of plasticity and local adaptation. All three species overlap in the time-window over which mean temperatures best predict variation in phenology and we find little evidence that the position of time-windows varies latitudinally, as expected if they were initiated by day-length. The focal species show pronounced temperature-mediated phenological plasticity of similar magnitude. While we find no evidence for local adaptation in the flowering times of the plants, geographic variation in the phenology of the butterfly reveals countergradient local adaptation. Geographic variation in the butterfly's phenology appears to be more sensitive to variation in temperature than the flowering times of the host plants and we find no evidence that coevolution has generated geographic variation in adaptive phenological plasticity.

Usage notes

Location

Britain