eLife (Feb 2020)

Origin of the mechanism of phenotypic plasticity in satyrid butterfly eyespots

  • Shivam Bhardwaj,
  • Lim Si-Hui Jolander,
  • Markus R Wenk,
  • Jeffrey C Oliver,
  • H Frederik Nijhout,
  • Antonia Monteiro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.49544
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Plasticity is often regarded as a derived adaptation to help organisms survive in variable but predictable environments, however, we currently lack a rigorous, mechanistic examination of how plasticity evolves in a large comparative framework. Here, we show that phenotypic plasticity in eyespot size in response to environmental temperature observed in Bicyclus anynana satyrid butterflies is a complex derived adaptation of this lineage. By reconstructing the evolution of known physiological and molecular components of eyespot size plasticity in a comparative framework, we showed that 20E titer plasticity in response to temperature is a pre-adaptation shared by all butterfly species examined, whereas expression of EcR in eyespot centers, and eyespot sensitivity to 20E, are both derived traits found only in a subset of species with eyespots.

Keywords