Centre for Reproduction and Genomics and Allan Wilson Centre for Molecular Ecology and Evolution, Department of Anatomy, University of Otago, , Dunedin, New Zealand, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Otago, , Dunedin, New Zealand, School of Animal Biology, University of Western Australia and CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences, , Perth, Western Australia 6009, Australia, Science and Risk Assessment Directorate, Ministry for Primary Industries, , PO Box 2526, Wellington, New Zealand, Landcare Research, , Private Bag 1930, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Proc Biol Sci. 2013 Oct 30;280(1773):20132549. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2013.2549. Print 2013 Dec 22.
Humankind's ongoing battle with pest species spans millennia. Pests cause or carry disease, damage or consume food crops and other resources, and drive global environmental change. Conventional approaches to pest management usually involve lethal control, but such approaches are costly, of varying efficiency and often have ethical issues. Thus, pest management via control of reproductive output is increasingly considered an optimal solution. One of the most successful such 'fertility control' strategies developed to date is the sterile male technique (SMT), in which large numbers of sterile males are released into a population each generation. However, this approach is time-consuming, labour-intensive and costly. We use mathematical models to test a new twist on the SMT, using maternally inherited mitochondrial (mtDNA) mutations that affect male, but not female reproductive fitness. 'Trojan females' carrying such mutations, and their female descendants, produce 'sterile-male'-equivalents under natural conditions over multiple generations. We find that the Trojan female technique (TFT) has the potential to be a novel humane approach for pest control. Single large releases and relatively few small repeat releases of Trojan females both provided effective and persistent control within relatively few generations. Although greatest efficacy was predicted for high-turnover species, the additive nature of multiple releases made the TFT applicable to the full range of life histories modelled. The extensive conservation of mtDNA among eukaryotes suggests this approach could have broad utility for pest control.
人类与害虫的斗争持续了数千年。害虫会引发或传播疾病,破坏或消耗农作物和其他资源,并推动全球环境变化。传统的害虫管理方法通常涉及致命控制,但这些方法成本高,效率各异,而且常常存在伦理问题。因此,通过控制繁殖产量来管理害虫越来越被认为是一种最佳解决方案。迄今为止开发的最成功的“生育力控制”策略之一是不育雄虫技术(SMT),其中每代都会释放大量不育雄虫进入种群。然而,这种方法既耗时、劳动密集又昂贵。我们使用数学模型来测试 SMT 的一个新变体,该变体利用影响雄性但不影响雌性生殖适应性的母系遗传线粒体(mtDNA)突变。携带这种突变的“特洛伊雌性”及其雌性后代在自然条件下会在多代中产生“不育雄虫”等效物。我们发现,特洛伊雌性技术(TFT)有可能成为一种新颖的、人道的害虫控制方法。单次大规模释放和相对较少的小重复释放的特洛伊雌性都在相对较少的几代内提供了有效且持久的控制。虽然高周转率物种的效果最佳,但多次释放的累加性质使 TFT 适用于模型化的所有生命史范围。真核生物中线粒体 DNA 的广泛保守性表明,这种方法可能具有广泛的害虫控制用途。