Abstract

To escape or alleviate low temperatures in winter, insects have evolved many behavioral and physiological strategies. The purple stem borer, Sesamia inferens (Walker) is currently reported to be expanding their northern distributions and causing damage to summer maize in Xinxiang, China. However, their method of coping with the lower temperature in the new northern breeding area in winter is largely unknown. This paper investigates the overwinter site of S. inferens, and identifies the cold hardiness of larvae collected from a new breeding area in winter and explores a potential distribution based on low temperature threshold and on species distribution model MaxEnt. The results show that the overwintering location of the S. inferens population is more likely to be underground with increasing latitude and the population gradually moved down the corn stalk and drilled completely underground in later winter (February) in the north. The cold hardiness test shows the species is a moderate freeze-tolerant one, and Supercooling Points (SCP), Freezing Points (FP) and the incidence of mortality during the middle of winter (January, SCP: -7.653, FP: -6.596) were significantly lower than early winter (October) or late winter (March). Distribution in the new expansion area was predicted and the survival probability area was below N 35° for the Air Lower Lethal Temperature (ALLT50) and below N 40° for the Underground Lower Lethal Temperature (ULLT50). The suitable habitat areas for S. inferens with MaxEnt were also below N 40°. This study suggests the overwinter strategies of S. inferens have led to the colonization of up to a five degree more northerly overwintering latitude.

Highlights

  • Temperature is the main abiotic factor that determines the growth and breeding of ectotherms

  • The living S. inferens population was closer to the ground with increasing latitude in late winter and 100% and 75% of overwinter individuals were underground in northern locations in XX and NJ, respectively

  • Most of the S. inferens population was distributed above ground

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Summary

Introduction

Temperature is the main abiotic factor that determines the growth and breeding of ectotherms. The minimum temperature in winter which determines the survival rate of insect wintering populations is an important factor limiting the potential geographical distribution of insects [2, 3], in ectotherms, setting northern range limits [3,4,5]. The low temperature in winter constrains the behavioral strategies of colonial insects [6], such as migration, drilling holes in refuges or making a thick cocoon, to avoid winterkilling. The warming of the global climate has led to poleward distribution in some species’ ranges, and may result in insects evolving new overwintering strategies in different breeding areas [8, 9]

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