Polyphenism in Insects

Population Density 0301 basic medicine 0303 health sciences Insecta Agricultural and Biological Sciences(all) Genotype Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology(all) Population Dynamics Adaptation, Biological Feeding Behavior Environment Epigenesis, Genetic 03 medical and health sciences Phenotype Animals Seasons Cues
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2011.06.006 Publication Date: 2011-09-26T14:11:51Z
ABSTRACT
Polyphenism is the phenomenon where two or more distinct phenotypes are produced by the same genotype. Examples of polyphenism provide some of the most compelling systems for the study of epigenetics. Polyphenisms are a major reason for the success of the insects, allowing them to partition life history stages (with larvae dedicated to feeding and growth, and adults dedicated to reproduction and dispersal), to adopt different phenotypes that best suit predictable environmental changes (seasonal morphs), to cope with temporally heterogeneous environments (dispersal morphs), and to partition labour within social groups (the castes of eusocial insects). We survey the status of research on some of the best known examples of insect polyphenism, in each case considering the environmental cues that trigger shifts in phenotype, the neurochemical and hormonal pathways that mediate the transformation, the molecular genetic and epigenetic mechanisms involved in initiating and maintaining the polyphenism, and the adaptive and life-history significance of the phenomenon. We conclude by highlighting some of the common features of these examples and consider future avenues for research on polyphenism.
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