Life history strategies and habitat templets of tropical butterflies in north-eastern Australia

被引:0
|
作者
M.F. Braby
机构
[1] James Cook University of North Queensland,Department of Zoology
[2] Harvard University,Museum of Comparative Zoology
[3] The Australian National University,School of Botany and Zoology
来源
Evolutionary Ecology | 2002年 / 16卷
关键词
habitat templets; Lepidoptera; life history evolution; life history strategies; mating system; Nymphalidae; - and ; -selection; Satyrinae; tropical ecology;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Three multivoltine species of satyrine butterflies in the genus Mycalesis (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) are narrowly sympatric in the wet–dry tropics of north-eastern Australia. They show a range of ecological strategies and adaptations associated with contrasting habitats and varying selective pressures. Two abiotic factors, namely favorability (the reciprocal of seasonal adversity) and predictability (broadly the reciprocal of disturbance), were examined as potential environmental selective forces in shaping their life histories. Comparison of several key life history traits of the ‘wet-season form’ revealed that the life histories of each species corresponded well with their habitat characteristics. M. perseus, which lives in habitats which are less favorable (i.e. adverse) and more unpredictable (i.e. temporary), shows many traits of an r-type strategy: smaller size, faster development, earlier maturation, higher fecundity, smaller egg size, and rapid population increase. By contrast, M. sirius and M. terminus, which live in more favorable and predictable (i.e. permanent) habitats, have many life history attributes and other characteristics in common which link them closer to K-type strategies. The only discrepancy is lower potential reproductive effort of M. perseus, which may be accounted for in terms of an evolutionary trade-off, such as with dispersal or dormancy. Other correlates associated with the M. perseus life history tactic include higher sex-size dimorphism, greater dispersal ability, better tolerance to adverse conditions, stronger phenotypic variation, greater degree of polyandry, and a more flexible breeding strategy. The life history patterns of these species are discussed in the context of evolutionary life history models, particularly the Southwood–Greenslade habitat templet.
引用
收藏
页码:399 / 413
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Life history strategies and habitat templets of tropical butterflies in north-eastern Australia
    Braby, MF
    [J]. EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY, 2002, 16 (04) : 399 - 413
  • [2] A DESCRIPTION OF FRESHWATER TURTLE HABITAT DESTRUCTION BY FERAL PIGS IN TROPICAL NORTH-EASTERN AUSTRALIA
    Doupe, Robert G.
    Schaffer, Jason
    Knott, Matthew J.
    Dicky, Paul W.
    [J]. HERPETOLOGICAL CONSERVATION AND BIOLOGY, 2009, 4 (03): : 331 - 339
  • [3] COMMUNITY PHENOLOGICAL PATTERNS OF A LOWLAND TROPICAL RAINFOREST IN NORTH-EASTERN AUSTRALIA
    HOPKINS, MS
    GRAHAM, AW
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 1989, 14 (04): : 399 - 413
  • [4] Fine-scale habitat preferences and habitat partitioning by three mycophagous mammals in tropical wet sclerophyll forest, north-eastern Australia
    Vernes, K
    [J]. AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, 2003, 28 (05) : 471 - 479
  • [5] EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE AND HOSTPLANTS ON SURVIVAL, DEVELOPMENT AND BODY-SIZE IN 3 TROPICAL SATYRINE BUTTERFLIES FROM NORTH-EASTERN AUSTRALIA
    BRABY, MF
    JONES, RE
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 1994, 42 (02) : 195 - 213
  • [6] Ecology, life history, and genetic differentiation in Neotropical Melinaea (Nymphalidae: Ithomiini) butterflies from north-eastern Peru
    McClure, Melanie
    Elias, Marianne
    [J]. ZOOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, 2017, 179 (01) : 110 - 124
  • [7] LIFE-HISTORY ADAPTATIONS OF PHYLLOPODS IN RESPONSE TO PREDATORS, VEGETATION, AND HABITAT DURATION IN NORTH-EASTERN NATAL
    HAMER, ML
    APPLETON, CC
    [J]. HYDROBIOLOGIA, 1991, 212 : 105 - 116
  • [8] Elevational Distribution of Flightless Ground Beetles in the Tropical Rainforests of North-Eastern Australia
    Staunton, Kyran M.
    Nakamura, Akihiro
    Burwell, Chris J.
    Robson, Simon K. A.
    Williams, Stephen E.
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2016, 11 (05):
  • [9] The effects of vegetation structure on the birds in a tropical savanna woodland in north-eastern Australia
    Tassicker, A. L.
    Kutt, A. S.
    Vanderduys, E.
    Mangru, S.
    [J]. RANGELAND JOURNAL, 2006, 28 (02): : 139 - 152
  • [10] Stable Isotope Anatomy of Tropical Cyclone Ita, North-Eastern Australia, April 2014
    Munksgaard, Niels C.
    Zwart, Costijn
    Kurita, Naoyuki
    Bass, Adrian
    Nott, Jon
    Bird, Michael I.
    [J]. PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (03):