Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5921731 Journal of Insect Physiology 2013 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Mosquitoes have a complex life cycle that includes aquatic and terrestrial stages.•This study investigates whether thermal acclimation in larvae affects adults.•Critical thermal maximum was affected by both larval and adult acclimation.•Metabolic rate-temperature curves were affected by adult acclimation only.•Results are examined in the context of habitat variability and predictability.

It has now been well established that insects can respond to variation in their environment via acclimation, yet the extent of the response varies among populations and environmental characteristics. One under-investigated theme which may contribute to this variation concerns acclimation effects across the life cycle. The present study explores how acclimation in the larval stage of Culex pipiens affects thermal relations in the adult stage. Mosquitoes were reared in a full factorial design at 18 or 26 °C as larvae and adults, then critical thermal maxima (CTmax) and metabolic rate-temperature relationships (MR-T) were determined for all 4 treatments. CTmax was positively affected by both larval and adult acclimation treatments. MR-T slope was significantly affected only by adult treatment: warm acclimated adults had on average shallower slopes and higher y-intercepts than cool acclimated ones. These results demonstrate that larval acclimation effects can alter adult phenotypes in a species whose life cycle includes two drastically different environments, an aquatic and a terrestrial stage. Studying insects with complex life cycles, especially those with aquatic or subterranean larval stages, can provide valuable information on the effects of thermal variability and predictability on phenotypic plasticity.

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Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Insect Science
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