Tenna Toftegaard
Stockholm University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Tenna Toftegaard.
AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2015
José Antonio Navarro-Cano; Bengt Karlsson; Diana Posledovich; Tenna Toftegaard; Christer Wiklund; Johan Ehrlén; Karl Gotthard
Knowledge of how species interactions are influenced by climate warming is paramount to understand current biodiversity changes. We review phenological changes of Swedish butterflies during the latest decades and explore potential climate effects on butterfly–host plant interactions using the Orange tip butterfly Anthocharis cardamines and its host plants as a model system. This butterfly has advanced its appearance dates substantially, and its mean flight date shows a positive correlation with latitude. We show that there is a large latitudinal variation in host use and that butterfly populations select plant individuals based on their flowering phenology. We conclude that A. cardamines is a phenological specialist but a host species generalist. This implies that thermal plasticity for spring development influences host utilization of the butterfly through effects on the phenological matching with its host plants. However, the host utilization strategy of A. cardamines appears to render it resilient to relatively large variation in climate.
Oecologia | 2015
Diana Posledovich; Tenna Toftegaard; Christer Wiklund; Johan Ehrlén; Karl Gotthard
Diapause plays a central role in insect life cycles by allowing survival during adverse seasonal conditions as well as synchronizing life cycles with the period of mate and food availability. Seasonal timing is expected to be particularly important for species that are dependent on resources available during a short time window—so-called phenological specialists—and latitudinal clines in seasonality are expected to favor local adaptation in phenological timing. However, to what degree latitudinal variation in diapause dynamics and post-winter development due to such local adaptation is influenced by the degree of phenological specialization is not well known. We experimentally studied two pierid butterfly species and found that the phenological specialist Anthocharis cardamines had shorter diapause duration than the phenological generalist Pieris napi along a latitudinal gradient in Sweden. Moreover, diapause duration increased with latitude in P. napi but not in A. cardamines. Sensitivity of the two species to winter thermal conditions also differed; additional cold temperature during the winter period shortened diapause duration for P. napi pupae but not for A. cardamines pupae. In both species, post-winter pupal development was faster after longer periods of cold conditions, and more southern populations developed faster than northern populations. Post-winter development was also invariably faster at higher temperatures in both species. We argue that the observed differences in diapause dynamics between the two species might be explained by the difference in phenological specialization that influences the costs of breaking diapause too early in the season.
Journal of Animal Ecology | 2015
Diana Posledovich; Tenna Toftegaard; Christer Wiklund; Johan Ehrlén; Karl Gotthard
Interactions between herbivorous insects and their host plants that are limited in time are widespread. Therefore, many insect-plant interactions result in a developmental race, where herbivores need to complete their development before plants become unsuitable, while plants strive to minimize damage from herbivores by outgrowing them. When spring phenologies of interacting species change asymmetrically in response to climate warming, there will be a change in the developmental state of host plants at the time of insect herbivore emergence. In combination with altered temperatures during the subsequent developmental period, this is likely to affect interaction strength as well as fitness of interacting species. Here, we experimentally explore whether the combined effect of phenological matching and thermal conditions influence the outcome of an insect-host interaction. We manipulated both developmental stages of the host plants at the start of the interaction and temperature during the subsequent developmental period in a model system of a herbivorous butterfly, Anthocharis cardamines, and five of its Brassicaceae host plant species. Larval performance characteristics were favoured by earlier stages of host plants at oviposition as well as by higher developmental temperatures on most of the host species. The probability of a larva needing a second host plant covered the full range from no influence of either phenological matching or temperature to strong effects of both factors, and complex interactions between them. The probability of a plant outgrowing a larva was dependent only on the species identity. This study demonstrates that climatic variation can influence the outcome of consumer-resource interactions in multiple ways and that its effects differ among host plant species. Therefore, climate warming is likely to change the temporal match between larval and plant development in some plant species, but not in the others. This is likely to have important implications for host plant use and possibly influence competitive relationships.
Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2014
Diana Posledovich; Tenna Toftegaard; José Antonio Navarro-Cano; Christer Wiklund; Johan Ehrlén; Karl Gotthard
Oikos | 2016
Tenna Toftegaard; Diana Posledovich; José Antonio Navarro-Cano; Christer Wiklund; Karl Gotthard; Johan Ehrlén
Journal of Animal Ecology | 2018
Diana Posledovich; Tenna Toftegaard; Christer Wiklund; Johan Ehrlén; Karl Gotthard
Oikos | 2018
Tenna Toftegaard; Diana Posledovich; José Antonio Navarro-Cano; Christer Wiklund; Karl Gotthard; Johan Ehrlén
Archive | 2016
Tenna Toftegaard; Diana Posledovich; José Antonio Navarro-Cano; Christer Wiklund; Karl Gotthard; Johan Ehrlén
Archive | 2016
Tenna Toftegaard; Diana Posledovich; José Antonio Navarro-Cano; Christer Wiklund; Karl Gotthard; Johan Ehrlén
Archive | 2016
Tenna Toftegaard; Diana Posledovich; Malin A. E. König; Christer Wiklund; Karl Gotthard; Johan Ehrlén