Line | A small number of the forest species of |
lepidoptera (moths and butterflies, which exist as | |
caterpillars during most of their life cycle) exhibit | |
regularly recurring patterns of population growth | |
(5) | and decline—such fluctuations in population are |
known as population cycles. Although many different | |
variables influence population levels, a regular pattern | |
such as a population cycle seems to imply a | |
dominant, driving force. Identification of that driving | |
(10) | force, however, has proved surprisingly elusive |
despite considerable research. The common | |
approach of studying causes of population cycles by | |
measuring the mortality caused by different agents, | |
such as predatory birds or parasites, has been | |
(15) | unproductive in the case of lepidoptera. Moreover, |
population ecologists’ attempts to alter cycles by | |
changing the caterpillars’ habitat and by reducing | |
caterpillar populations have not succeeded. In short, | |
the evidence implies that these insect populations, if | |
(20) | not self-regulating, may at least be regulated by an |
agent more intimately connected with the insect than | |
are predatory birds or parasites. | |
Recent work suggests that this agent may be a | |
virus. For many years, viral disease had been reported | |
(25) | in declining populations of caterpillars, but population |
ecologists had usually considered viral disease to | |
have contributed to the decline once it was underway | |
rather than to have initiated it. The recent work has | |
been made possible by new techniques of molecular | |
(30) | biology that allow viral DNA to be detected at low |
concentrations in the environment. Nuclear | |
polyhedrosis viruses are hypothesized to be the | |
driving force behind population cycles in lepidoptera | |
in part because the viruses themselves follow an | |
(35) | infectious cycle in which, if protected from direct |
sunlight, they may remain virulent for many years | |
in the environment, embedded in durable crystals of | |
polyhedrin protein. Once ingested by a caterpillar, | |
the crystals dissolve, releasing the virus to infect | |
(40) | the insect’s cells. Late in the course of the infection, |
millions of new virus particles are formed and | |
enclosed in polyhedrin crystals. These crystals | |
reenter the environment after the insect dies and | |
decomposes, thus becoming available to infect | |
(45) | other caterpillars. |
One of the attractions of this hypothesis is its broad | |
applicability. Remarkably, despite significant differences | |
in habitat and behavior, many species of lepidoptera | |
have population cycles of similar length, between eight | |
(50) | and eleven years. Nuclear polyhedrosis viral infection is |
one factor these disparate species share. |