Evidence of long range transport of a dark morph swallowtail butterfly (Papilio glaucus) on a storm front into northern Michigan (Lepidoptera : Papilionidae)

Citation
Jm. Scriber et al., Evidence of long range transport of a dark morph swallowtail butterfly (Papilio glaucus) on a storm front into northern Michigan (Lepidoptera : Papilionidae), GT LAKE ENT, 31(3-4), 1998, pp. 151-160
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology/Pest Control
Journal title
GREAT LAKES ENTOMOLOGIST
ISSN journal
00900222 → ACNP
Volume
31
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
151 - 160
Database
ISI
SICI code
0090-0222(199823)31:3-4<151:EOLRTO>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
A dark morph female Papilio glaucus was captured in the middle of a P. cana densis population in the center of Dickinson County, in Michigan's Upper Pe ninsula. We are unaware of any dark female ever being captured at this lati tude, and none within 400 km has ever before been reported. Morphological w ing traits all score this dark female as P.! glaucus, with all 31 of the ot her (yellow) females captured from the same group of nectar sources scoring as Il canadensis. Two diagnostic electrophoretic allozymes (PGD and LDH) s how all 24 males to have 100% P. canadensis alleles, and 98% canadensis all eles were seen for the HK locus. The dark female had the P. glaucus X-linke d allele for PGD, the P. canadensis X-linked allele for LDH, and was hetero zygous for diagnostic HK alleles which are autosomal. All other yellow fema les that were examined were pure canadensis type for the sex-linked PGD and LDH alleles. One yellow female was heterozygous for the autosomal HK diagn ostic alleles. Along distance "blow-in" on a strong weather front from the southwest is suspected as the most likely explanation for the appearance of this dark morph female of mixed (introgressed) genetic background so far f rom its nearest known source. The blow-in was not likely to have been in a previous year since this dark morph female would require both (1) a dark mo rph mother with the Y-linked dark gene and (2) a father that was part I! gl aucus (i.e, without the color suppressor genes and with a PGD-100 allele). None of the males from this area had PGD or LDH alleles of the canadensis t ype this year or ever previously, making it unlikely that the blow-in occur red in a previous year.