Journal article

From cryptic to colorful: Evolutionary decoupling of larval and adult color in butterflies

I Medina, R Vega-Trejo, T Wallenius, MRE Symonds, D Stuart-Fox

Evolution Letters | Published : 2020

Abstract

Many animals undergo complete metamorphosis, where larval forms change abruptly in adulthood. Color change during ontogeny is common, but there is little understanding of evolutionary patterns in these changes. Here, we use data on larval and adult color for 246 butterfly species (61% of all species in Australia) to test whether the evolution of color is coupled between life stages. We show that adults are more variable in color across species than caterpillars and that male adult color has lower phylogenetic signal. These results suggest that sexual selection is driving color diversity in male adult butterflies at a broad scale. Moreover, color similarities between species at the larval sta..

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Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

We thank Adnan Moussalli and Joshua Munro for access to butterfly phylogenetic information, analyses, and butterfly photographs, and Bob Miller and the people that maintain the websites we used. We also thank Damien Esquerre and Emma Sherratt for advice on analyses. IM was supported by a University of Melbourne McKenzie Fellowship. DSF was supported by an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship. The authors declare no conflict of interest.