Evolution of periodicity in periodical cicadas

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作者
Hiromu Ito
Satoshi Kakishima
Takashi Uehara
Satoru Morita
Takuya Koyama
Teiji Sota
John R. Cooley
Jin Yoshimura
机构
[1] Graduate School of Science and Technology,Department of Mathematical and Systems Engineering
[2] Shizuoka University,Department of Zoology
[3] Nagoya College,Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
[4] Toyoake,Department of Environmental and Forest Biology
[5] Aichi Pref.,undefined
[6] Shizuoka University,undefined
[7] Graduate School of Science,undefined
[8] Kyoto University,undefined
[9] University of Connecticut,undefined
[10] State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry,undefined
[11] Marine Biosystems Research Center,undefined
[12] Chiba University,undefined
[13] Uchiura,undefined
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摘要
Periodical cicadas (Magicicada spp.) in the USA are famous for their unique prime-numbered life cycles of 13 and 17 years and their nearly perfectly synchronized mass emergences. Because almost all known species of cicada are non-periodical, periodicity is assumed to be a derived state. A leading hypothesis for the evolution of periodicity in Magicicada implicates the decline in average temperature during glacial periods. During the evolution of periodicity, the determinant of maturation in ancestral cicadas is hypothesized to have switched from size dependence to time (period) dependence. The selection for the prime-numbered cycles should have taken place only after the fixation of periodicity. Here, we build an individual-based model of cicadas under conditions of climatic cooling to explore the fixation of periodicity. In our model, under cold environments, extremely long juvenile stages lead to extremely low adult densities, limiting mating opportunities and favouring the evolution of synchronized emergence. Our results indicate that these changes, which were triggered by glacial cooling, could have led to the fixation of periodicity in the non-periodical ancestors.
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