Rachael Derbyshire

Postdoctoral Researcher

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Migration distance as a selective episode for wing morphology in a migratory insect


Journal article


D. T. Flockhart, B. Fitz-gerald, L. Brower, R. Derbyshire, S. Altizer, K. Hobson, K. Hobson, L. Wassenaar, D. Norris
Movement Ecology, 2017

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Flockhart, D. T., Fitz-gerald, B., Brower, L., Derbyshire, R., Altizer, S., Hobson, K., … Norris, D. (2017). Migration distance as a selective episode for wing morphology in a migratory insect. Movement Ecology.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Flockhart, D. T., B. Fitz-gerald, L. Brower, R. Derbyshire, S. Altizer, K. Hobson, K. Hobson, L. Wassenaar, and D. Norris. “Migration Distance as a Selective Episode for Wing Morphology in a Migratory Insect.” Movement Ecology (2017).


MLA   Click to copy
Flockhart, D. T., et al. “Migration Distance as a Selective Episode for Wing Morphology in a Migratory Insect.” Movement Ecology, 2017.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{d2017a,
  title = {Migration distance as a selective episode for wing morphology in a migratory insect},
  year = {2017},
  journal = {Movement Ecology},
  author = {Flockhart, D. T. and Fitz-gerald, B. and Brower, L. and Derbyshire, R. and Altizer, S. and Hobson, K. and Hobson, K. and Wassenaar, L. and Norris, D.}
}

Abstract

BackgroundSelective pressures that occur during long-distance migration can influence morphological traits across a range of taxa. In flying insects, selection should favour individuals that have wing morphologies that increase energy efficiency and survival. In monarch butterflies, differences in wing morphology between migratory and resident populations suggest that migratory populations have undergone selection for larger (as measured by length and area) and more elongated (as measured by roundness and aspect ratio) forewings. However, selection on wing morphology may also occur within migratory populations, particularly if individuals or populations consistently migrate different distances.ResultsUsing 613 monarch butterflies that were collected on the Mexican wintering grounds between 1976 – 2014, we tested whether monarch wing traits were associated with migratory distance from their natal areas in eastern North America (migration range: 774–4430 km), as inferred by stable-hydrogen (δ2H) and -carbon (δ13C) isotopic measurements. Monarchs that migrated farther distances to reach their overwintering sites tended to have longer and larger wings, suggesting positive selective pressure during migration on wing length and area. There was no relationship between migration distances and either roundness or aspect ratio.ConclusionsOur results provide correlative evidence that the migratory period may act as a selective episode on monarch butterfly wing morphology, although selection during other portions of the annual cycle, as well as extensive mixing of individuals from various natal locations on the breeding grounds, likely counteracts directional selection of migration on morphology.



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