Data from: The predictive adaptive response: modeling the life history evolution of the butterfly, Bicyclus anynana, in seasonal environments.
Data files
Aug 22, 2012 version files 71.53 MB
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allocation strategy pupae.txt
12.18 MB
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behavior.txt
8.32 KB
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data experiment PAR.txt
1.76 KB
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individual survival data.txt
51.91 MB
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individuals.txt
28.08 KB
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pupal weight data.txt
7.19 MB
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README_for_allocation strategy pupae.doc
23.55 KB
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README_for_behavior.doc
23.55 KB
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README_for_data experiment PAR.doc
23.55 KB
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README_for_individual survival data.doc
23.55 KB
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README_for_individuals.doc
23.55 KB
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README_for_pupal weight data.doc
23.55 KB
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README_for_thorax ratio and abdomen weight.doc
23.55 KB
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README_for_traits.doc
23.55 KB
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thorax ratio and abdomen weight.txt
309 B
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traits.txt
22.80 KB
Abstract
A predictive adaptive response (PAR) is a type of developmental plasticity where the response to an environmental cue is not immediately advantageous but instead is later in life. The PAR is a way for organisms to maximize fitness in varying environments. Insects living in seasonal environments are valuable model systems for testing the existence and form of PAR. Previous manipulations of the larval and the adult environments of the butterfly Bicyclus anynana have shown that individuals that were food restricted during the larval stage coped better with forced flight during the adult stage compared to those with optimal conditions in the larval stage. Here, we describe a state-dependent energy allocation model, which we use to test whether such a response to food restriction could be adaptive in nature where this butterfly exhibits seasonal cycles. The results from the model confirm the responses obtained in our previous experimental work and show how such an outcome was facilitated by resource allocation patterns to the thorax during the pupal stage. We conclude that for B. anynana, early-stage cues can direct development toward a better adapted phenotype later in life and, therefore, that a PAR has evolved in this species.