May 26, 2016

Page 10

PHOTO/KELSEY FITZGERALD

Doctoral student Anne Espeset holds samples of cabbage white butterfly wings collected from around the world by the Pieris Project.

Winged invasion Project studies spread of cabbage white butterfly

Call (775) 328-6147 for free and confidential testing This publication was supported by the Nevada State Division of Public and Behavioral Health through Grant Number 5U62PS003654-05 from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official view of the Division nor the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

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MAY 26, 2016

For nearly two years, University of Nevada, Reno doctoral student Anne Espeset has been helping collect cabbage white butterflies from all over the globe by as part of a citizen science effort called the Pieris Project. Now, with more Kelsey Fitzgerald than 1,400 specimens in hand, she and a team of researchers from across the U.S. are using these samples to learn about how species adapt to changes in their environment. The cabbage white (Pieris rapae) is a small white butterfly with black wing-tips and one or two black dots on each forewing. Familiar to many vegetable gardeners, these butterflies lay eggs on the leaves of cruciferous vegetables, which are preferred food items for their hungry caterpillars. “Gardeners do not like them,” Espeset said. “The caterpillars will eat your entire cabbage plant. They’ll eat anything in the Brassicaceae family—so, cabbage, radishes, broccoli, anything of that sort.” Cabbage white butterflies are native to Europe, but have spread across Asia, North America, Australia, Hawaii and other locations. Small and fairly inconspicuous, they are now one of the most common and widespread species of butterfly in the world. Although many research projects focus on rare or endangered species, the Pieris Project takes the opposite approach, focusing on how and why this extremely common species is able to do well in so many environments. To do so, they are recruiting citizen scientists from around the world to send in samples of cabbage white butterflies that they catch in their gardens or yards. Espeset and her colleagues are interested in learning exactly how these For more information on the Pieris Project, butterflies spread from place to place, and about adaptations that they make visit www.pierisproject. to live in different environments. They use genetic samples from the dead org butterflies that people mail in to determine relationships between various populations. “These are a pest species,” Espeset said. “They came from Europe sometime in the 1800s, We’re trying to determine if that was just one introduction, or if there were multiple introductions across the United States.” In her laboratory at UNR, Espeset sorts through thousands of tiny envelopes of butterfly wings. Some come from as close as Lemmon Valley, others from far-off locations like Japan and Australia. Working with advisor Dr. Matt Forister, Espeset’s particular research interest is in discovering whether the physical appearance of the cabbage white butterfly changes in different environments. To study this, she analyzes each specimen for pigments called pterins, which are rich in nitrogen and responsible for the white color of the butterflies’ wings. In agricultural landscapes, use of nitrogen from fertilizers may make it easier for male butterflies to obtain the nutrients they need to make these wing pigments, says Espeset—a contrast to the conditions these butterflies face in non-agricultural environments. “In a natural population, only good quality males are able to sequester and allocate these pterins to their wings, so then the female would want to choose those individuals [to mate with]. I’m seeing how human environmental change is affecting that natural process,” Espeset said. Ω


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May 26, 2016 by Reno News & Review - Issuu