skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


This content will become publicly available on March 18, 2026

Title: Like mother, like daughter? Phenotypic plasticity, environmental covariation, and heritability of size in a parthenogenetic wasp
Abstract Parthenogenetic wasps provide an ideal natural experiment to study the heritability, plasticity, and microevolutionary dynamics of body size. Dinocampus coccinellae (Hymenoptera:Braconidae, Euphorinae) is a solitary, generalist braconid parasitoid wasp that reproduces through thelytokous parthenogenesis, and parasitizes over fifty diverse species of coccinellid ladybeetles worldwide as hosts. Here we designed an experiment with parthenogenetic lines of D. coccinellae presented with three different host ladybeetle species of varying sizes, across multiple generations to investigate heritability, and plasticity of body size measured via a combination of morphometric variables such as thorax width, abdominal width, and wing length in D. coccinellae. We expected positively correlated parent-offspring parasitoid regressions, indicative of heritable size variation, from unilineal (parent and offspring reared on same host species) lines, since these restrict environmental variation in phenotypes. In contrast, because multilineal (parent and offspring reared on different host species) lines would induce phenotypic plasticity of clones reared in varying environments, we expected negatively correlated parent-offspring parasitoid regressions. Our results indicate (1) little heritable variation in body size, (2) strong independence of offspring size on the host environment, (3) small mothers produce larger offspring, and vice versa, independent of host. We then model the evolution of size and host-shifting under a constrained fecundity advantage model of Cope’s Law using a Hidden Markov Model, showing that D. coccinellae likely has fitness advantages to maintain plasticity in body size despite parthenogenetic reproduction.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2147812
PAR ID:
10582835
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
Publisher / Repository:
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
ISSN:
1420-9101
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Salinity conditions in oyster breeding grounds in the Gulf of Mexico are expected to drastically change due to increased precipitation from climate change and anthropogenic changes to local hydrology. We determined the capacity of the eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica , to adapt via standing genetic variation or acclimate through transgenerational plasticity (TGP). We outplanted oysters to either a low- or medium-salinity site in Louisiana for 2 years. We then crossed adult parents using a North Carolina II breeding design, and measured body size and survival of larvae 5 dpf raised under low or ambient salinity. We found that TGP is unlikely to significantly contribute to low-salinity tolerance since we did not observe increased growth or survival in offspring reared in low salinity when their parents were also acclimated at a low-salinity site. However, we detected genetic variation for body size, with an estimated heritability of 0.68 ± 0.25 (95% CI). This suggests there is ample genetic variation for this trait to evolve, and that evolutionary adaptation is a possible mechanism through which oysters will persist with future declines in salinity. The results of this experiment provide valuable insights into successfully breeding low-salinity tolerance in this commercially important species. 
    more » « less
  2. Abstract Predator and prey traits are important determinants of the outcomes of trophic interactions. In turn, the outcomes of trophic interactions shape predator and prey trait evolution. How species' traits respond to selection from trophic interactions depends crucially on whether and how heritable species' traits are and their genetic correlations. Of the many traits influencing the outcomes of trophic interactions, body size and movement traits have emerged as key traits. Yet, how these traits shape and are shaped by trophic interactions is unclear, as few studies have simultaneously measured the impacts of these traits on the outcomes of trophic interactions, their heritability, and their correlations within the same system.We used outcrossed lines of the ciliate protistParamecium caudatumfrom natural populations to examine variation in morphology and movement behaviour, the heritability of that variation, and its effects onParameciumsusceptibility to predation by the copepodMacrocyclops albidus.We found that theParameciumlines exhibited heritable variation in body size and movement traits. In contrast to expectations from allometric relationships, body size and movement speed showed little covariance among clonal lines. The proportion ofParameciumconsumed by copepods was positively associated withParameciumbody size and velocity but with an interaction such that greater velocities led to greater predation risk for large body‐sized paramecia but did not alter predation risk for smaller paramecia. The proportion of paramecia consumed was not related to copepod body size. These patterns of predation risk and heritable trait variation in paramecia suggest that copepod predation may act as a selective force operating independently on movement and body size and generating the strongest selection against large, high‐velocity paramecia.Our results illustrate how ecology and genetics can shape potential natural selection on prey traits through the outcomes of trophic interactions. Further simultaneous measures of predation outcomes, traits, and their quantitative genetics will provide insights into the evolutionary ecology of species interactions and their eco‐evolutionary consequences. Read the freePlain Language Summaryfor this article on the Journal blog. 
    more » « less
  3. When evaluating avian reproduction, life history theory examines the trade‐offs between parental effort, the number and size of offspring, and the rate of nestling development. The growth rates and body sizes of developing birds vary geographically and can diverge with both latitude and migratory strategy. In terms of offspring size, growth rate can deviate in nestlings of the same or similar species due to the correlated influences of weather events, predation pressure, food availability, number of nestmates and parental provisioning. Furthermore, a longer photoperiod for species nesting at higher latitudes increases the duration over which a nestling can be fed each day, and increased nestling provisioning has been positively correlated with growth rate. Whether the amount of time a bird is fed during development drives this variation in growth rate and morphology is unknown. By removing supplemental environmental stressors (e.g. weather, predation) and standardizing feeding rate and environment, we explored the influence of daily duration of nestling provisioning on dark‐eyed junco Junco hyemalis nestlings. We hand‐reared 65 chicks of a sedentary junco subspecies J. h. carolinensis under both their natural photoperiod and the longer photoperiod of a closely related migratory subspecies J. h. hyemalis and compared growth rate, mass, morphology and the amount of food consumed. Average growth rate, fasted mass, wing length and total daily food consumption were all greater in birds hand‐reared under the longer, more northern photoperiod treatment. These findings suggest that increased daily photoperiod at higher latitudes may allow for greater total food provisioning and thus may play a role in the ability of parents in compressed breeding seasons to produce high quality offspring. This points to a trade‐off between provisioning effort and nestling growth rate in lower latitude (shorter photoperiod) populations and points to an important role of developmental plasticity on growth rate and morphology. 
    more » « less
  4. Ex situ conservation, translocation, and reintroduction are becoming increasingly important for species restoration. In amphibians, however, effects of captive stress on adults and subsequent effects on their offspring that are later reintroduced into the wild are largely unknown. Using Fowler’s toads (Anaxyrus fowleri) as a model species, we investigated effects of increased captive stress on corticosterone (CORT) concentration in adult toads. We then examined CORT levels in their tadpole offspring, which we reared in natural ponds to simulate conditions of a reintroduced population. We found no significant effects of captive stress on adult or offspring CORT levels. However, despite poor model performance due to low sample size, baseline CORT of sires (but not dams) was the best predictor of, and negatively correlated with, baseline CORT and change in CORT in offspring. Our study provides a unique perspective on the potential translation of stress from parent to offspring and points to a need for a closer examination of paternal effects in cases of cross-generational studies in amphibians. 
    more » « less
  5. Abstract Parental exposure to environmental stress can influence phenotypic plasticity by offspring developing under that stressor. Transgenerational effects may also reshape natural selection on developmental plasticity by influencing its fitness consequences and expression of its genetic variation. We tested these hypotheses in the purple sea urchinStrongylocentrotus purpuratus, an invertebrate exposed to coastal upwelling (periods of low temperature and pH impacting biomineralization and performance). We conditioned parents and larvae to experimental upwelling and integrated RNA-seq, phenotyping of body size and biomineralization, and measured fitness-correlated traits in a quantitative genetic experiment. Larvae developing under upwelling induced widespread differential expression (DE), decreased biomineralization, and reduced body size. We detected fitness benefits for increased biomineralization and reduced size under upwelling indicative of adaptive plasticity, but only when larvae were spawned from parents exposed to upwelling. Larval DE was largely associated with adaptive phenotypic plasticity. Negative genetic correlation in DE was abundant between genes associated with adaptive plasticity. However, genetic correlations in DE associated with body size plasticity were significantly more positive in larvae from upwelling-exposed parents. These results show that transgenerational effects modify the fitness landscape and genetic architecture of phenotypic plasticity and its regulatory pathways. 
    more » « less