Adult body size is one of the most ecologically relevant quantitative traits that underlies many other life-history traits of particular organism. In insects, there is positive intraspecific relationship between body size and female fecundity. In this study small scale temporal and spatial and space variability in structural body size of Poecilus cupreus and Anchomenus dorsalis was investigated. The beetles were collected in four fields near Prague-Suchdol in autumn 2009 and 2010, and in spring 2010, 2011 and 2012. In both species structural body size was significantly affected by sex (females were the larger sex). In A. dorsalis structural body size was also significantly affected by arable field identity, overwintering (post-overwintering individuals collected in spring were larger in comparison to pre-overwintering individuals collected in autumn), sampling year, overwintering by year and arable field by year interactions. Our results suggest that spatiotemporal variation in environmental conditions experienced by A. dorsalis during larval growth resulted in differences in adult structural body size among particular fields and particular sampling years. In addition, mean structural body size in A. dorsalis was affected by overwintering, which was probably caused by size-specific winter mortality. Moreover, effect of overwintering varied among years, probably according to the specific weather conditions during a particular winter.
Body size is an integrative trait with substantial fitness consequences in animals. Geographical clines in body size have fascinated biologists because of their potential to provide insight into the mechanisms governing local adaptation and phenotypic plasticity. In this complex study, we focused on variation in body size of Silpha carinata (Coleoptera: Silphidae) along elevation gradients in Central Europe. Altitudinal clines were investigated separately for males and females as sex-specific responses to environmental conditions are documented for a variety of insect species. To identify potential underlying mechanisms responsible for observed patterns, a common garden experiment and investigation of within-population variation in body size were performed. Body size of S. carinata recorded in nature sharply decreased with increasing altitude in both genders, whereas sexual size dimorphism did not change with altitude. The degree of within-population variation in body size recorded in nature did not change with altitude. Under standardized laboratory conditions, higher altitude females produced smaller eggs than those from lower altitude. This size difference persisted to the very end of the larval period. Unfortunately, only few offspring survived till adulthood in the laboratory and thus precise analysis of offspring adult sizes was unfeasible, but between-population differences in body size seems to persist to adulthood. The observed converse Bergmann's cline in S. carinata fits well with what has been predicted for large, carnivorous, univoltine insect species. Until now, investigation of within-population variation in body size is rare in insects, and future complementary studies focused on this issue are highly needed as within-population variation could explain body size patterns observed at between-population level.
Body condition, in terms of body mass corrected for structural body size, represents an animal's energetic reserves and is an indicator of the health and fitness of an organism. This study investigates the variability in the body condition of the carabid beetle, Anchomenus dorsalis, in time and space at a small scale. The beetles were collected in four fields with two types of boundary (grassy and forest) near Prague-Suchdol in autumn 2009 and 2010 and in spring 2010 and 2011. Body condition was significantly affected by overwintering (the body condition of post-overwintering individuals collected in spring was worse than that of pre-overwintering individuals collected in autumn), sex (females were in better condition than males) and to a lesser extent by sampling year, field identity and several interactions, e.g., overwintering : sex (greater decrease in body condition during overwintering in males than in females), overwintering : year (difference in body condition between pre-overwintering and post-overwintering individuals was greater in 2009/2010 than 2010/2011). Type of boundary had no substantial effect on the body condition of A. dorsalis. This study shows the importance of sampling body condition several times a year for more than one season, which has rarely been performed to date.
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