Plasticity and genetic effects contribute to different axes of neural divergence in a community of mimetic Heliconius butterflies

Author:

Hebberecht Laura123ORCID,Wainwright J. Benito3ORCID,Thompson Charlotte2,Kershenbaum Simon2,McMillan W. Owen1ORCID,Montgomery Stephen H.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Gamboa Panama

2. Department of Zoology University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

3. School of Biological Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

Abstract

Abstract Changes in ecological preference, often driven by spatial and temporal variation in resource distribution, can expose populations to environments with divergent information content. This can lead to adaptive changes in the degree to which individuals invest in sensory systems and downstream processes, to optimize behavioural performance in different contexts. At the same time, environmental conditions can produce plastic responses in nervous system development and maturation, providing an alternative route to integrating neural and ecological variation. Here, we explore how these two processes play out across a community of Heliconius butterflies. Heliconius communities exhibit multiple Mullerian mimicry rings, associated with habitat partitioning across environmental gradients. These environmental differences have previously been linked to heritable divergence in brain morphology in parapatric species pairs. They also exhibit a unique dietary adaptation, known as pollen feeding, that relies heavily on learning foraging routes, or trap-lines, between resources, which implies an important environmental influence on behavioural development. By comparing brain morphology across 133 wild-caught and insectary-reared individuals from seven Heliconius species, we find strong evidence for interspecific variation in patterns of neural investment. These largely fall into two distinct patterns of variation; first, we find consistent patterns of divergence in the size of visual brain components across both wild and insectary-reared individuals, suggesting genetically encoded divergence in the visual pathway. Second, we find interspecific differences in mushroom body size, a central component of learning and memory systems, but only among wild caught individuals. The lack of this effect in common-garden individuals suggests an extensive role for developmental plasticity in interspecific variation in the wild. Finally, we illustrate the impact of relatively small-scale spatial effects on mushroom body plasticity by performing experiments altering the cage size and structure experienced by individual H. hecale. Our data provide a comprehensive survey of community level variation in brain structure, and demonstrate that genetic effects and developmental plasticity contribute to different axes of interspecific neural variation. Abstract Comparing brain morphology across a Panamanian community of Heliconius butterflies, we find evidence for interspecific variation along two axes: heritable divergence in the size of visual brain components, and plastic differences in mushroom body size, a central component of learning and memory systems. We illustrate the impact of small-scale spatial effects on mushroom body plasticity.

Funder

British Ecological Society

H2020 European Research Council

Leverhulme Trust

Natural Environment Research Council

Royal Commission for the Great Exhibition

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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