Life (Jan 2022)

Modeling Sexual Differences of Body Size Variation in Ground Beetles in Geographical Gradients: A Case Study of <i>Pterostichus melanarius</i> (Illiger, 1798) (Coleoptera, Carabidae)

  • Sergey Luzyanin,
  • Anatoly Saveliev,
  • Nadezhda Ukhova,
  • Iraida Vorobyova,
  • Igor Solodovnikov,
  • Anatoliy Anciferov,
  • Rifgat Shagidullin,
  • Teodora Teofilova,
  • Sargylana Nogovitsyna,
  • Viktor Brygadyrenko,
  • Viktor Alexanov,
  • Raisa Sukhodolskaya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/life12010112
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 112

Abstract

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The aim of this study was to test the steepness of body size variation in males and females in the widespread ground beetle Pterostichus melanarius in geographical gradients. Beetles were sampled in 15 regions of Europe and Asia, and sampling territories differed 17° in latitude and 121° in longitude. We measured six linear traits in every captured beetle and formed a data set that included 2154 individuals. Body size variation in all traits in general was sawtooth, both in latitude and in longitude gradients. Regression analysis showed slight trends: in the latitude gradient, elytra parameters increased, pronotum length did not change but the width increased, and head parameters decreased. In the longitude gradient, the changes were as follows: elytra length increased, but its width did not change; pronotum length did not change, but its width increased; the head parameters decreased. Thus, we observed the elytra length increase and the head parameters decrease northwards and eastwards. We compared female and male regression curves (trait size on latitude/longitude): p-levels were significant only in four cases out of 12. Thus, we conclude that, in general, there is no evidence for the steepness in trait variation in males compared with females.

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