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Ontogenetic shift from aposematism and gregariousness to crypsis in a Romaleid grasshopper.

Author(s): Despland E

Traits of chemically-defended animals can change as an individual grows and matures, and both theoretical and empirical evidence favour a direction of change from crypsis to aposematism. This study examines the suite of traits involved in an unusual opposit...

Article GUID: 32817631

Top-down and bottom-up controls on an herbivore on a native and introduced plant in a tropical agricultural landscape.

Author(s): Despland E, Santacruz PG

PeerJ. 2020;8:e8782 Authors: Despland E, Santacruz PG

Article GUID: 32206453

How does synchrony with host plant affect the performance of an outbreaking insect defoliator?

Author(s): Fuentealba A, Pureswaran D, Bauce É, Despland E

Oecologia. 2017 08;184(4):847-857 Authors: Fuentealba A, Pureswaran D, Bauce É, Despland E

Article GUID: 28756489

Detoxification of host plant phenolic aglycones by the spruce budworm.

Author(s): Donkor D, Mirzahosseini Z, Bede J, Bauce E, Despland E

PLoS One. 2019;14(5):e0208288 Authors: Donkor D, Mirzahosseini Z, Bede J, Bauce E, Despland E

Article GUID: 31095557


Title:Ontogenetic shift from aposematism and gregariousness to crypsis in a Romaleid grasshopper.
Authors:Despland E
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32817631
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0237594
Category:PLoS One
PMID:32817631
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Biology Department, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Description:

Traits of chemically-defended animals can change as an individual grows and matures, and both theoretical and empirical evidence favour a direction of change from crypsis to aposematism. This study examines the suite of traits involved in an unusual opposite shift from aposematism to crypsis in a neotropical toxic-plant-feeding Romaleid grasshopper, Chromacris psittacus (Gerstaecker, 1873). Field surveys, behavioural observations and a rearing experiment compare host plant choice, aggregation, locomotion and thermoregulation between life history stages. Results showed that both nymphs and adults fed exclusively on a narrow range of Solanaceae plants, suggesting that the shift in defensive syndrome is not due to a change in chemical defense. Instead, nymphal aposematism appears linked to aggregation in response to plant-based selection pressures. Slow nymphal development suggests a cost to feeding on toxic plant compounds, and grouping could mitigate this cost. Grouping also increases conspicuousness, and hence can favour warning colourating in chemically-defended insects. The role of diet breadth in aposematism is poorly understood, and these results suggest how constraints imposed by feeding on toxic plants can generate bottom-up selection pressures shaping the adaptive suites of traits of chemically-defended animals.

PMID: 32817631 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]