Data From: Rapid expansion and visual specialisation of learning and memory centers in the brains of Heliconiini butterflies
Changes in the abundance and diversity of neural cell types, and their connectivity, shape brain composition and provide the substrate for behavioral evolution. Although investment in sensory brain regions is understood to be largely driven by the relative ecological importance of particular sensory...
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Zusammenfassung: | Changes in the abundance and diversity of neural cell types, and their
connectivity, shape brain composition and provide the substrate for
behavioral evolution. Although investment in sensory brain regions is
understood to be largely driven by the relative ecological importance of
particular sensory modalities, how selective pressures impact the
elaboration of integrative brain centers has been more difficult to
pinpoint. Here, we provide evidence of extensive, mosaic expansion of an
integration brain center among closely related species, which is not
explained by changes in sites of primary sensory input. By building new
datasets of neural traits among a tribe of diverse Neotropical
butterflies, the Heliconiini, we detected several major evolutionary
expansions of the mushroom bodies, central brain structures pivotal for
insect learning and memory. The genus Heliconius, which exhibits a unique
dietary innovation, pollen-feeding, and derived foraging behaviors reliant
on spatial memory, shows the most extreme enlargement. This expansion is
primarily associated with increased visual processing areas and coincides
with increased precision of visual processing, and enhanced long-term
memory. These results demonstrate that selection for behavioral innovation
and enhanced cognitive ability occurred through expansion and localized
specialization in integrative brain centers. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.f1vhhmh28 |