Charlat Sylvain, Hornett Emily A, Dyson Emily A, Ho Patrick P Y, Loc Nguyen Thi, Schilthuizen Menno, Davies Neil, Roderick George K, Hurst Gregory D D
Department of Biology, University College London, London NW1 2HE, United Kingdom.
Mol Ecol. 2005 Oct;14(11):3525-30. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2005.02678.x.
Male-killing bacteria are generally thought to attain low to intermediate prevalence in natural populations, with only mild effects on the host population sex ratio. This view was recently challenged by reports of extremely high infection frequencies in three butterfly species, raising the prospect that male killers, by making males rare, might drive many features of host ecology and evolution. To assess this hypothesis, it is necessary to evaluate how often male killers actually produce a highly female-biased population sex ratio in nature, which requires both high prevalence of infection and high penetrance of action. To this end, we surveyed South Pacific and Southeast Asian populations of Hypolimnas bolina, a butterfly in which extreme prevalence of male-killing Wolbachia bacteria has recently been recorded. Our results indicate that highly female-biased populations are common in Polynesia, with 6 out of 12 populations studied having in excess of 70% of females infected with a fully efficient male killer. However, heterogeneity is extreme in Polynesia, with the male-killing Wolbachia absent from three populations. In contrast to the Polynesian situation, Wolbachia does not kill males in any of the three Southeast Asian populations studied, despite its very high prevalence there. We conclude that male killers are likely to have significant ongoing ecological and evolutionary impact in 6 of the 15 populations surveyed. The causes and consequences of the observed spatial variation are discussed with respect to host resistance evolution, host ecology and interference with additional symbionts.
通常认为,杀雄细菌在自然种群中的流行程度较低至中等,对宿主种群的性别比例影响较小。最近有报道称,三种蝴蝶的感染频率极高,这一观点受到了挑战,这引发了一种可能性,即杀雄细菌通过使雄性变得稀少,可能推动宿主生态和进化的许多特征。为了评估这一假设,有必要评估杀雄细菌在自然界中实际产生高度偏雌的种群性别比例的频率,这既需要高感染率,也需要高作用穿透率。为此,我们调查了细纹凤蝶(Hypolimnas bolina)在南太平洋和东南亚的种群,最近有记录显示这种蝴蝶中杀雄的沃尔巴克氏体细菌感染率极高。我们的结果表明,高度偏雌的种群在波利尼西亚很常见,在研究的12个种群中,有6个种群中超过70%的雌性感染了完全有效的杀雄细菌。然而,波利尼西亚的异质性极高,有三个种群中不存在杀雄的沃尔巴克氏体。与波利尼西亚的情况相反,在所研究的三个东南亚种群中,尽管沃尔巴克氏体的流行率很高,但它在任何一个种群中都不会杀死雄性。我们得出结论,在所调查的15个种群中,有6个种群的杀雄细菌可能正在产生重大的生态和进化影响。我们还讨论了观察到的空间变异的原因和后果,涉及宿主抗性进化、宿主生态以及对其他共生体的干扰。