Abstract

The body size of the pale grass blue butterfly, Zizeeria maha, has been used as an environmental indicator of radioactive pollution caused by the Fukushima nuclear accident. However, geographical and temporal size distributions in Japan and temperature effects on size have not been established in this species. Here, we examined the geographical, temporal, and temperature-dependent changes of the forewing size of Z. maha argia in Japan. Butterflies collected in 2012 and 2013 from multiple prefectures throughout Japan demonstrated an inverse relationship of latitude and forewing size, which is the reverse of Bergmann’s cline. The Fukushima population was significantly larger than the Aomori and Miyagi populations and exhibited no difference from most of the other prefectural populations. When monitored at a single geographic locality every other month, forewing sizes were the largest in April and the smallest in August. Rearing larvae at a constant temperature demonstrated that forewing size followed the temperature-size rule. Therefore, the converse Bergmann’s rule and the temperature-size rule coexist in this multivoltine species. Our study establishes this species as a useful environmental indicator and supports the idea that the size reduction observed only in Fukushima Prefecture in 2011 was caused by the environmental stress of radioactive pollution.

Highlights

  • The body size of the pale grass blue butterfly, Zizeeria maha, has been used as an environmental indicator of radioactive pollution caused by the Fukushima nuclear accident

  • Prefectural populations with relatively small forewing size may include the Ishikawa population and the Osaka population

  • The status of the Fukushima population and, to a lesser extent, the Aichi population in our analysis indicated that these populations may contain butterflies with the medial or representative size in Japan

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Summary

Introduction

The body size of the pale grass blue butterfly, Zizeeria maha, has been used as an environmental indicator of radioactive pollution caused by the Fukushima nuclear accident. The converse Bergmann’s rule and the temperature-size rule coexist in this multivoltine species Our study establishes this species as a useful environmental indicator and supports the idea that the size reduction observed only in Fukushima Prefecture in 2011 was caused by the environmental stress of radioactive pollution. Adults can be found from May to November in Honshu, including in the Tohoku and Kanto districts This species is small enough that hundreds or thousands of individuals may be reared in a small laboratory, without the assistance of any ant species. To establish the pale grass blue butterfly as a standard environmental indicator species in Japan, it is necessary to study the natural forewing size distributions of this butterfly both spatially and temporally

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