Genetic and Diurnal Variation in the Juvenile Hormone Titer in a Wing‐Polymorphic Cricket: Implications for the Evolution of Life Histories and Dispersal
- 1 March 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in Physiological and Biochemical Zoology
- Vol. 74 (2) , 293-306
- https://doi.org/10.1086/319664
Abstract
The wing-polymorphic cricket, Gryllus firmus, contains (1) a flight-capable morph (LWf) with long wings and functional flight muscles, (2) a flightless morph with reduced wings and underdeveloped flight muscles (SW), and (3) a flightless morph with histolyzed flight muscles but with fully developed wings (LWh). The LWf morph differed genetically from the SW morph and phenotypically from the LWh morph in the size of flight muscles, ovarian growth during the first week of adulthood, and the hemolymph titer of juvenile hormone (JH). This is the first study to document that phenotypes that differ genetically in morphological aspects of dispersal capability and in ovarian growth also differ genetically in the titer of a hormone that potentially regulates those traits. The JH titer rose 9-100-fold during the photophase in the flight-capable LWf morph but did not change significantly during this time in either flightless morph. Prolonged elevation of the in vivo JH titer in flight-capable females, by topical application of a hormone analogue, caused a substantial increase in ovarian growth and histolysis of flight muscles. The short-term, diurnal rise in the JH titer in the dispersing morph may be a mechanism that allows JH to positively regulate nocturnal flight behavior, while not causing maladaptive histolysis of flight muscles and ovarian growth. This is the first demonstration of naturally occurring, genetically based variation for diurnal change in a hormone titer in any organism.Keywords
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