Data for: Chill coma recovery in the invasive harlequin ladybird, Harmonia axyridis: investigations of repeated exposures, ontogenetic changes and capacity to predict winter survival

Published: 18 December 2018| Version 5 | DOI: 10.17632/mn5gr2v83k.5
Contributors:
Michal Knapp, David RENAULT, Philippe Vernon

Description

Studies on chill coma recovery in the ladybird, Harmonia axyridis: ontogenetic profile, effect of repeated cold exposures, and capacity to predict winter survival Abstract The harlequin ladybird, Harmonia axyridis, is one of the most successful invasive insect species worldwide. We investigated whether (i) chill coma recovery time (CCRt) changes during the ontogenetic development of this species, (ii) CCRt varies in response to repeated cold shocks, and (iii) CCRt could be a good predictor of winter survival ability in adults. CCRt decreased during larval development, the lowest CCRt values were observed in teneral adults (one and four days old), and significantly higher values were observed for older adults (16 and 32 days old). Repeated cold shocks (two hours at -3 °C), interrupted by short (30 minutes) warm periods (22 °C) resulted in decreased CCRt after the second cold shock, probably depicting an acclimation response, but then CCRt increased with additional cold shocks, likely revealing the accumulation of chill injuries. The CCRt of pre-overwintering individuals was not correlated with their winter survival. This indicates that CCRt is not a reliable measure of cold tolerance in H. axyridis. However, this result could be partially affected by the experimental setup – the use of laboratory-reared individuals who experienced standardized conditions and thus the variability in CCRt of tested animals could be much lower than the variability present in nature. The substantial variation observed over the ontogenetic development of H. axyridis poses important methodological implications for future studies, as animals of the same stage/age should be compared with each other. The observed U-shaped response to repeated cold shocks indicates that the expectation of linearity between cold exposure and insect response is an oversimplification of real situations. Table A.2 – Raw data analysed in experiment 1 (Ontogeny). Table A.3 – Raw data analysed in experiment 2 (Repeated cold shock). Table A.4 – Raw data analysed in experiment 3 (Winter survival).

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Entomology, Biological Sciences, Insect Physiology

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