All organisms use environmental cues to alter genetic programmes that generate variable phenotypic responses (
Nijhout 1999;
Stearns 1989;
West-Eberhard 1989,
2003). These gene–environment interactions allow organisms to display phenotypic plasticity to cope with environments that are variable but have some predictability. In multi-cellular organisms, phenotypic plasticity can result from subtle or profound changes in developmental programmes. When discrete alternative phenotypes result from gene–environment interactions, such as the alternative castes in a social insect colony, they are called polyphenisms. Despite the ubiquity of plasticity and its importance in mediating how organisms interact with their environment, the mechanisms regulating alternative phenotypes are poorly understood.
Environmentally induced plasticity and genetic variation can produce similar phenotypic variation (
Nijhout 1999). For example, variation in body size is determined both by genetic variation, often distributed among multiple loci, and by an interaction of genotype and environment (
Partridge et al. 1994). This may indicate that phenotypic plasticity and natural genetic variation in a trait are mediated by the same genes. Alternatively, novel mechanisms may have evolved to allow flexible phenotypic responses to the environment. At the moment, there are few data with which to test these alternatives directly. However, there are data on mutations observed in the laboratory that may be relevant to this problem.
For example, in the buckeye butterfly,
Precis coenia, the autumn morph is usually induced by low temperature and short days, but if individuals are homozygous for the recessive allele of the
rosa gene (a spontaneous laboratory mutation), they produce the autumn phenotype independent of environmental conditions (
Rountree & Nijhout 1995).
Another example is the relationship between phenocopies, which are environmentally induced phenotypic changes that mimic effects of mutations, and genocopies, which are mutationally induced phenotypic changes that mimic environmentally induced changes. Phenocopies have been most thoroughly studied in laboratory populations of
Drosophila, where phenocopies have been induced to mimic a wide variety of mutations. In a series of classic experiments,
Waddington (1956) demonstrated that the frequency of phenocopies can be increased with selection. This indicates that genetic variation exists for susceptibility to phenocopies, which may be analogous to the genetic variation that exists in natural populations for the susceptibility of polyphenism induction.
Gibson & Hogness (1996) demonstrated that some of the genetic variation for susceptibility to ether-induced
bithorax phenocopies resides at the
Ubx locus, the gene at which
bithorax mutants can be generated. In cases where polyphenisms mimic phenotypes generated by a polymorphism, one specific question is whether genotype by environment interaction for polyphenism induction occurs at the same loci that control the polymorphism. Answering this question would also help to clarify the evolutionary relationship between genetic and environmental control of such adaptive phenotypic variation.
We have started to address this question by examining the environmental and genetic induction of winged and wingless phenotypes in the pea aphid,
Acyrthosiphon pisum (Hemiptera: Aphididae). During the parthenogenetic generations of the life cycle (see Electronic Appendix; ), pea aphid females develop without wings under favourable environmental conditions, but when the host-plant quality declines, or the plant becomes overcrowded, females produce offspring that develop wings (
wing polyphenism) and then may disperse by flight (
Müller et al. 2001). These cues act via the mother and affect the phenotype of developing embryos shortly before birth (
Sutherland 1969a,
b). The winged female is typically fully winged, flight-capable and exhibits a variety of characteristics associated with flight, including (but not limited to) fully developed thoracic wing musculature, heavy sclerotization of head and thorax, ocelli and specialized antennae. The wingless female produces no wings or wing rudiments, no ocelli and smaller compound eyes (
Kalmus 1945;
Kring 1977;
Kawada 1987;
Tsuji & Kawada 1987). The winged phenotype further differs from the wingless phenotypes by showing a longer developmental time, longer reproductive period, lower offspring production and a prolonged longevity (e.g.
MacKay & Wellington 1975).
In the single sexual generation of the pea aphid life cycle, females are always wingless and the males are either winged or wingless (
Eastop 1971;
Blackman & Eastop 2000). The production of different male phenotypes is insensitive to environmental variation and controlled by the X-linked, biallelic locus
aphicarus (
api) (
Smith & MacKay 1989;
Caillaud et al. 2002;
Braendle et al. in press). The alternative alleles at the
api locus cause the winged (
apiw) or wingless (
apiwl) male phenotype (
wing polymorphism). (Males are haploid for the X chromosome owing to the XX:XO sex determination system (
Blackman 1987). Therefore, depending on its
api genotype, an aphid clone—consisting of genetically identical parthenogenetic females that are diploid for the X chromosome—will produce only winged males (
apiw/
apiw), only wingless males (
apiwl/
apiwl), or both male phenotypes in equal proportions (
apiw/
apiwl) (
Caillaud et al. 2002;
Braendle et al. in press).
The coexistence of a wing polyphenism and a wing polymorphism in natural populations of the pea aphid provides an ideal system for examining the mechanistic relationship between genetic and environmental induction of alternative phenotypes. Pea aphid clones differ considerably in their propensity to produce winged offspring in response to a given environmental cue, indicating the presence of genotype by environment interactions for this trait (
Markkula 1963;
Lowe & Taylor 1964;
Sutherland 1969a,
b,
1970;
MacKay & Lamb 1979;
Lamb & MacKay 1983;
Weisser & Braendle 2001). One hypothesis is that genetic variation in the propensity to produce winged parthenogenetic females is due to genotype by environment interaction at the
api locus. In an initial test of this hypothesis, we examined whether clones with different
api genotypes vary in their propensity to produce winged parthenogenetic females. In two assays, we measured variation in the propensity to produce winged females in F
2 clones segregating for the three different
api genotypes. First, we measured the propensity of F
2 clones to produce winged offspring in response to a wing-inducing cue, a combined crowding and starvation stimulus. Second, to more closely mimic natural conditions, we measured the production of winged offspring by F
2 clones at a constant (wing-inducing) density over 12 consecutive parthenogenetic generations. The results of both experiments suggest genetic linkage of factors controlling the wing polyphenism and wing polymorphism. This outcome is consistent with the hypothesis that genotype by environment interaction at the
api locus explains genetic variation in the inducibility of the polyphenism.