VLIZ
VLAAMS INSTITUUT VOOR DE ZEE
MARIEN EN KUSTGEBONDEN ONDERZOEK & BELEID IN VLAANDEREN
   
© VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ
 
 
  English  Sitemap  Print
U bent hier: VLIZ > datacentrum
menu1 Over het VLIZ menu2 Infoloket menu3 Zeebibliotheek menu4 Cijfers&Beleid menu5 Faciliteiten menu6 Datacentrum
   
Datacentrum
  - IMIS: Integrated Marine Information System -
log in

Personen | Instituten | Publicaties | Projecten | Datasets | Kaarten
meld een fout in dit recordmandje (0): toevoegen | tonen Print-vriendelijke versie

The adaptiveness of wing-dimorphism in the salt marsh-inhabiting planthopper, Prokelisia marginata (Homoptera: Delphacidae) Peer reviewed article
Denno, R.F.; Grissell, E.E. (1979). The adaptiveness of wing-dimorphism in the salt marsh-inhabiting planthopper, Prokelisia marginata (Homoptera: Delphacidae) Ecology 60(1): 221-236. dx.doi.org/10.2307/1936482
In: Ecology. Ecological Society of America: Durham. ISSN 0012-9658, meer

Beschikbaar in Auteurs 

Trefwoorden
    Dimorphism; Vleugels; Zoutmoerassen; Insecta [insecten] [WoRMS]; Prokelisia marginata; Spartina alterniflora [Amerikaans slijkgras] [WoRMS]; A, Atlantic [gazetteer]; USA, Gulf Coast; Marien

Auteurs  Top 

Abstract
    Populations of the multivoltine planthopper, Prokelisia marginata (Delphacidae), contain two wing-forms, flightless short-winged brachypters and macropters with fully developed wings capable of flight. P. marginata feeds selectively on the grass, Spartina alterniflora, which dominates the vegetation of Atlantic and Gulf Coast tidal salt marshes. We demonstrate that along most of the Atlantic seaboard S. alterniflora occurs as a harlequin environment composed of stable patches that provide life history requisites year-round and unstable ones that disappear altogether during winter. The proportion of macropters in planthopper population is significantly correlated with the proportion of unstable patches in the local environment. A dimorphism is maintained along most of the Atlantic Coast because brachypters remain and effectively exploit stable patches and macropters colonize and subsequently escape unstable habitats. Along the Gulf Coast S. alterniflora occurs as one rather stable habitat, and here planthopper populations are composed mostly of brachypters. The percentage of macropters in populations is positively correlated with levels of crowding incurred during the nymphal stage, suggesting that wing-form is determined by a developmental switching mechanism triggered by various environmental cues that predict habitat deterioration. The relationship between crowding and macroptery is linear at Atlantic and Gulf Coast localities, but greater proportions of macropters are produced on Atlantic marshes under similarly crowded conditions. As a mechanism to explain differences in the wing-morph composition of populations, we propose that selection has altered the threshold at which a developmental switch responds to environmental cues such as crowding.



 Top | Auteurs 
 

 

Vlaams Instituut voor de Zee
InnovOcean site
Wandelaarkaai 7
B-8400 OOSTENDE, België
Tel: +32 [0]59/34 21 30
Fax: +32 [0]59/34 21 31
Email: info@vliz.be
   

 

Vlaamse Gemeenschap Provincie West-Vlaanderen