Tripet Frédéric, Clegg Simon, Elnaiem Dia-Eldin, Ward Richard D
School of Life Sciences, Keele University, Keele, Staffordshire, United Kingdom.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2009 Aug 18;3(8):e503. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000503.
Given the importance that the evolution of cooperation bears in evolutionary biology and the social sciences, extensive theoretical work has focused on identifying conditions that promote cooperation among individuals. In insects, cooperative or altruistic interactions typically occur amongst social insects and are thus explained by kin selection. Here we provide evidence that in Lutzomia longipalpis, a small biting fly and an important vector of leishmaniasis in the New World, cooperative blood-feeding in groups of non-kin individuals results in a strong decrease in saliva expenditure. Feeding in groups also strongly affected the time taken to initiate a bloodmeal and its duration and ultimately resulted in greater fecundity. The benefits of feeding aggregations were particularly strong when flies fed on older hosts pre-exposed to sand fly bites, suggesting that flies feeding in groups may be better able to overcome their stronger immune response. These results demonstrate that, in L. longipalpis, feeding cooperatively maximizes the effects of salivary components injected into hosts to facilitate blood intake and to counteract the host immune defences. As a result, cooperating sand flies enjoy enormous fitness gains. This constitutes, to our knowledge, the first functional explanation for feeding aggregations in this species and potentially in other hematophagous insects and a rare example of cooperation amongst individuals of a non-social insects species. The evolution of cooperative group feeding in sand flies may have important implications for the epidemiology of leishmaniasis.
鉴于合作进化在进化生物学和社会科学中的重要性,大量理论工作致力于确定促进个体间合作的条件。在昆虫中,合作或利他互动通常发生在社会性昆虫之间,因此可以用亲缘选择来解释。在这里,我们提供证据表明,在新大陆的一种小型吸血蝇——长须罗蛉(Lutzomia longipalpis)中,非亲缘个体群体中的合作吸血会导致唾液分泌量大幅减少。群体进食还强烈影响开始吸血的时间及其持续时间,并最终导致更高的繁殖力。当苍蝇以预先暴露于沙蝇叮咬的老年宿主为食时,聚集进食的好处尤为明显,这表明群体进食的苍蝇可能更有能力克服宿主更强的免疫反应。这些结果表明,在长须罗蛉中,合作进食能最大限度地发挥注入宿主体内的唾液成分的作用,以促进血液摄取并对抗宿主的免疫防御。因此,合作的沙蝇获得了巨大的适应性收益。据我们所知,这是对该物种以及可能对其他吸血昆虫聚集进食的首个功能性解释,也是非社会性昆虫物种个体间合作的罕见例子。沙蝇合作群体进食的进化可能对利什曼病的流行病学具有重要意义。