Explaining the sawtooth: latitudinal periodicity in a circadian gene correlates with shifts in generation number

  • R. C. Levy
    Department of Biology Tufts University Medford MA USA
  • G. M. Kozak
    Department of Biology Tufts University Medford MA USA
  • C. B. Wadsworth
    Department of Biology Tufts University Medford MA USA
  • B. S. Coates
    USDA‐ARS Corn Insects and Crop Genetics Research Unit Genetics Laboratory Iowa State University Ames IA USA
  • E. B. Dopman
    Department of Biology Tufts University Medford MA USA

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<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Many temperate insects take advantage of longer growing seasons at lower latitudes by increasing their generation number or voltinism. In some insects, development time abruptly decreases when additional generations are fit into the season. Consequently, latitudinal ‘sawtooth’ clines associated with shifts in voltinism are seen for phenotypes correlated with development time, like body size. However, latitudinal variation in voltinism has not been linked to genetic variation at specific loci. Here, we show a pattern in allele frequency among voltinism ecotypes of the European corn borer moth (<jats:italic>Ostrinia nubilalis)</jats:italic> that is reminiscent of a sawtooth cline. We characterized 145 autosomal and sex‐linked <jats:styled-content style="fixed-case">SNP</jats:styled-content>s and found that <jats:italic>period</jats:italic>, a circadian gene that is genetically linked to a major <jats:styled-content style="fixed-case">QTL</jats:styled-content> determining variation in post‐diapause development time, shows cyclical variation between voltinism ecotypes. Allele frequencies at an unlinked circadian clock gene <jats:italic>cryptochrome1</jats:italic> were correlated with <jats:italic>period</jats:italic>. These results suggest that selection on development time to ‘fit’ complete life cycles into a latitudinally varying growing season produces oscillations in alleles associated with voltinism, primarily through changes at loci underlying the duration of transitions between diapause and other life history phases. Correlations among clock loci suggest possible coupling between the circadian clock and the circannual rhythms for synchronizing seasonal life history. We anticipate that latitudinal oscillations in allele frequency will represent signatures of adaptation to seasonal environments in other insects and may be critical to understanding the ecological and evolutionary consequences of variable environments, including response to global climate change.</jats:p>

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