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First published online December 14, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 211, 24-28 (2008)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2008
doi: 10.1242/jeb.008219
Impaired escape flight ability in butterflies due to low flight muscle ratio prior to hibernation
Department of Zoology, Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: maria.almbro{at}zoologi.su.se)
Accepted 18 October 2007
| Summary |
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Key words: predation risk, insect flight, weight, Aglais urticae
| INTRODUCTION |
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Aside from chemical defences and camouflage, adult butterflies rely on
their flight ability to avoid predation (Chai and Srygley, 1991), and as for
any winged prey animal, take-off ability, flight speed and manoeuvrability are
likely to be crucial factors during a predator attack
(Marden and Chai, 1991
).
Whereas chemical defence is a fairly well studied area (reviewed in
Brower, 1984
), little empirical
data exist on evasive flight and its physiological, morphological and
behavioural determinants (Berwaerts et al.,
2002
).
Feeding dramatically and instantaneously affects the butterfly body
composition. Adults can increase body weight by 15 to 51% after feeding
(Pullin, 1987
;
Knopp and Krenn, 2003
) and,
over longer time scales, monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus)
accumulate lipids prior to migration such that up to 45% of body weight is fat
(Brown and Chippendale,
1974
).
Butterflies that hibernate must spend enough time foraging prior to
over-wintering to deposit sufficient stores to survive the winter and
reproduce the following spring. However, the extended time spent feeding
increases the amount of time the butterfly is exposed to predators. Further,
feeding may lower vigilance, increasing attack rates by birds
(Morse, 1975
), one of the main
predators of adult butterflies (Dempster,
1984
; Pinheiro,
1996
; Burger and Gochfeld,
2001
).
The small tortoiseshell (Aglais urticae) is a common butterfly
throughout Sweden that hibernates in dark, sheltered areas. It is known to
require a minimum lipid accumulation of about 20% of body mass to survive the
winter (Pullin, 1987
), making
it a suitable model for studying weight gain and flight behaviour. Aglais
urticae are eaten by birds when encountered
(Vallin et al., 2006
) and are
therefore likely to experience predator attacks, and should thus depend on
their flight to escape.
Along with wing and body morphology, and temperature
(Tsuji et al., 1986
;
Marden and Chai, 1991
;
Stutt and Willmer, 1998
;
Van Dyck and Matthysen, 1998
;
Berwaerts and Van Dyck, 2004
),
flight muscle ratio [FMR: thorax mass/total body mass
(Marden, 1987
)] greatly
influences butterfly flight performance
(Wickman, 1992
;
Berwaerts et al., 2002
). FMR
correlates positively with flight speed and manoeuvrability, whereas an
increased posterior weight load reduces FMR and changes the centre of body
mass, compromising manoeuvrability and decreasing speed in forward flight
(Srygley and Chai, 1990
;
Srygley and Dudley, 1993
). As
butterflies cannot increase flight muscle mass in the adult stage
(Boggs, 1981
), extra weight
from feeding and lipid accumulation will decrease FMR, potentially
compromising flight performance.
No study has, to our knowledge, measured the effects of natural weight
increases on free flight behaviour in butterflies (but see
Kingsolver and Srygley, 2000
;
Srygley and Kingsolver, 2000
;
Berwaerts et al., 2002
;
Berwaerts et al., 2006
). In
this study, we present an experimental procedure with naturally added weight
(ingested food), which alters the FMR of Aglais urticae. We measured
flight performance during normal take off and when subjected to a simulated
predator attack and demonstrate that butterfly flight behaviour is indeed
affected by FMR and perceived predation risk.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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To simulate an attack, a model predator (black cardboard box 0.2 m x 0.15 m x 0.15 m) was attached to a cart on a rail at a 14 degree incline and released 2 m from the butterfly perch. Butterfly flights were recorded both with a digital video camera and with a Trackit 3D-camera system (Biobserve Gmbtl, Bonn, Germany) that provided 50 x-, y- and z-coordinates per second (Fig. 1).
|
5±2 min;
indicated by wing quivering and positioning). Then it was either `attacked' by
the model predator, evoking an `escape flight' or allowed to take off
spontaneously (`control flight'). After performing a trial, butterflies were
cooled for about 15 min in the incubator and then weighed to the nearest 0.1
mg (Precisa 205A SCS, Dietikon, Switzerland; fresh weight); thereafter the
butterflies were killed by freezing (–18°C) and dissected to obtain
thorax weight (head, legs and wings excluded) and abdomen weight. For every individual, velocity, take-off angle and sinuosity were determined using the coordinates provided by the Trackit 3D camera system and Track 3d (a computer software program developed for analysing space–time data by Ulf Norberg, Stockholm University). For each flight, these measurements were calculated at 0.1, 0.3, 0.5, 0.7, 0.9 and 1.1 m distance from the start. Flight velocity (m s–1) was calculated when butterflies passed each of the six distances from the perch by measuring the distance between two successive coordinates and dividing by the time between the two recorded coordinates. The angle of ascent was calculated for each of the six distances as the angle between horizontal and a line drawn between the perch and the height of the butterfly at that distance. Sinuosity was calculated as the total distance flown divided by the length of a straight line from the perch to the location of the butterfly at each of the six distances. Morphological data were only included for butterflies that performed successful flights. In total, 59 butterflies were considered successful at performing flights that could be analysed, i.e. provided coordinates for long enough distances (set to a minimum length of 0.3 m) to be analysed. Butterflies typically took off in a more or less straight line towards the ceiling. Butterflies that were obviously damaged or ill were excluded from trials, as were butterflies that were inactive for more than 10 min in the experimental arena or flew outside of the recording area.
All data, including residuals, were normally distributed and a general linear model (GLM) with repeated measures for the six distances from the start was used (Statistica, version 7.1. StatSoft, Inc. 2005, Uppsala, Sweden). The type of flight (escape or control) was used as a categorical predictor, and flight muscle ratio (FMR: thorax mass/total body mass) as a continuous predictor. We also used linear regression to illustrate the relationship between FMR and flight ability in escape and control flights.
| RESULTS |
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Butterfly FMR ranged from 0.30 to 0.50 and did not differ between escape and control butterflies, and nor did any of the other measurements (t-test, d.f.=57 and Nescape=32, Ncontrol=27 for all tests; FMR: P=0.588, t=–0.545; body mass: P=0.550, t=0.602; thorax mass: P=0.969, t=–0.545; abdomen mass: P=0.354, t=0.934).
Flight speed
Butterflies that were subjected to a model predator attack flew at
significantly higher velocities than did their unattacked conspecifics
(Table 1,
Fig. 2). Furthermore, there was
an effect of FMR on individuals performing flights after a simulated attack;
escape fliers with a high FMR managed faster flights at 0.5 m from the start
than escape fliers with a low FMR, whereas there was no such effect of FMR on
flight speed among individuals performing control flights (linear regression
for velocities at 0.5 m from the start; escape flights: N=27,
b=0.46, r2=0.21, P=0.014; control
flights: N=32, r2=0.03, P=0.352;
Fig. 3A,B). According to the
relationship found, a decrease in FMR from 0.5 to 0.3, which represents the
variation in FMR found in our study, reduced escape flight velocity by 37% at
0.5 m from the start.
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Angle of ascent
The angle of ascent varied with distance from the start, with butterflies
flying at lower angles at 0.1 m than at greater distances
(Fig. 4,
Table 1; Tukey's test:
P<0.01 for each distance). There was also an interaction between
FMR and distance from the start (Table
1), where high FMR resulted in lower angles of ascent at 0.1 m
from the start (Fig. 5), but
not at the other distances (GLM with repeated measures followed by sequential
Bonferroni correction: at 0.1 m: F1,56=7.9,
P<0.007; at all the other distances P>0.1). The type
of flight (escape/control) was not found to affect the angle of ascent
(Table 1).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Despite the large increase in weight expected in this species before
hibernation (Pullin, 1987
),
FMR in Aglais urticae surpasses the lower limit (0.12–0.16)
needed for lift production in still air
(Marden, 1987
). Indeed, it is
fairly high when compared with the scarcely available data for other palatable
butterfly species (Marden and Chai,
1991
). Still, a reduction in FMR from 0.5 to 0.3, as was the range
in this study, markedly decreased flight speed in escaping butterflies by 37%,
indicating that gaining weight may well conflict with escape ability. Also,
FMRs reported in this study presumably do not represent the lowest occurring
naturally since the butterflies were captured during lipid accumulation, not
after entering hibernation. Even though most butterflies did fly in the
experimental arena, it is possible that the butterflies with very low FMRs
were excluded from the study as a result of not flying. Kingsolver and Srygley
(Kingsolver and Srygley, 2000
)
noted a decrease in flight activity in Colias and Pontia
butterflies after an experimental reduction of FMR by 10–17%. Remaining
still might be a way of reducing predator encounters and, in the case of
Aglais urticae, might allow it to rely on its cryptic appearance
while resting. The predation pressure on butterflies by birds has been
proposed to increase during the autumn
(Ide, 2006
), and wings from
Aglais urticae and Inachis io were found around bushes
(Buddleja davidii) visited by these butterflies for nectar feeding
(M.A., personal observation), suggesting that they experience attacks whilst
foraging.
Our finding that high FMRs gave lower take-off angles immediately after the
butterflies took flight could be explained by a change in body and stroke
plane angle in heavier butterflies as a result of a posterior shift in the
centre of body mass (Srygley and Chai,
1990
; Srygley,
1994
; Norberg,
1995
; Marden,
2000
). However, we found no evidence that take-off angles were
negatively affected in the long run by a reduction in FMR
(Marden, 1987
). Most
butterflies, regardless of treatment, performed flights with a net upwards
movement, suggesting that these ranges of FMR do not curb the ability to take
off.
That there was no difference in body mass or FMR between sexes in this study is reasonable since both males and females need to accumulate fat stores for hibernation. However, there is much reason to expect that FMR should vary between the sexes during spring due to reproductive investment, with females carrying a non-trivial egg load (i.e. lower FMR), whereas males should be lighter (i.e. higher FMR) as a result of spermatophore transfer. Possible differences in flight ability between males and females as a result of weight loads thus remain to be examined.
In summary, our study shows that escaping butterflies with a high FMR manage faster and straighter escape flights. This suggests that gaining weight has consequences for a butterfly's ability to evade an attacking predator and should be a major factor affecting behaviour and physiology in most palatable butterfly species.
| Acknowledgments |
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