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根据寄生虫分工感知和实际竞争进行等级比例调整。

Caste ratio adjustments in response to perceived and realised competition in parasites with division of labour.

机构信息

Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.

出版信息

J Anim Ecol. 2018 Sep;87(5):1429-1439. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12873. Epub 2018 Jun 29.

Abstract

Colonial organisms with division of labour are assumed to achieve increased colony-level efficiency in task performance through functional specialisation of individuals into distinct castes. In social insects, ratios of individuals in different castes can adjust adaptively in response to external threats. However, whether flexibility in caste ratio also occurs in other social organisms with division of labour remains unclear. Some parasitic trematodes, in which clonal colonies within the snail intermediate host comprise a reproductive caste and a soldier caste, offer good systems to test the general nature of adaptive caste ratio adjustments. Using the trematode Philophthalmus sp. as model, we test whether trematode colonies shift their composition towards more soldiers when exposed to a sustained risk of invasion by a competitor parasite species, and/or when experiencing sustained, active competition. We also quantify the colony-level fitness impact of caste ratio adjustments, measured as the colony's output of larval infective stages. We conducted two long-term laboratory experiments on within-snail trematode colonies. First, snails harbouring Philophthalmus colonies were exposed to different levels of invasion risk by another trematode species, Maritrema novaezealandense. Second, the structure of Philophthalmus colonies was quantified after a year-long period of within-snail competition with the other trematode species. When facing the risk of invasion by a competitor, independently of the level of risk, Philophthalmus colonies showed a significant shift towards producing more soldiers, resulting in altered caste ratio. Similarly, when experiencing actual competition by another trematode established in the same snail, Philophthalmus colonies also adjusted by producing significantly more soldiers. Greater investments in defense via more soldiers had negative impacts on the establishment and size of the competitor's colonies. Nevertheless, the presence of the competitor reduced the fitness (output of infective stages) of Philophthalmus colonies, although the production of more soldiers mitigated that effect. Our findings demonstrate that trematode colonies with division of labour are capable of adaptive caste ratio adjustments in response to both the perceived threat of competition and actual competition, with trade-offs against reproductive success only apparent when soldier numbers are very high. Combined with results on social insects, our study suggests parallel adaptations of colonial organisms in phylogenetically disparate organisms.

摘要

具有分工的殖民地生物被认为通过个体在不同等级之间的功能特化,从而在任务执行方面提高了殖民地水平的效率。在社会性昆虫中,不同等级的个体比例可以根据外部威胁做出适应性调整。然而,分工的其他具有社会性行为的生物体中是否也存在等级比例的灵活性尚不清楚。一些寄生吸虫,其中在蜗牛中间宿主内的克隆群体由生殖等级和士兵等级组成,为测试适应性等级比例调整的一般性质提供了很好的系统。我们使用吸虫 Philophthalmus sp. 作为模型,检验了当暴露于持续的寄生虫竞争物种入侵风险时,以及/或当经历持续的、主动的竞争时,吸虫群体是否会向更多的士兵等级转变。我们还量化了等级比例调整对殖民地水平适应性的影响,以幼虫感染阶段的殖民地输出量来衡量。我们在蜗牛内的吸虫群体中进行了两项长期实验室实验。首先,在不同水平的另一种吸虫 Maritrema novaezealandense 的入侵风险下,蜗牛体内寄生了 Philophthalmus 群体。其次,在与另一种吸虫竞争了一年后,量化了 Philophthalmus 群体的结构。当面临竞争物种入侵的风险时,无论风险水平如何,Philophthalmus 群体都表现出显著的向产生更多士兵等级的转变,从而改变了等级比例。同样,当与在同一蜗牛中建立的另一种吸虫实际竞争时,Philophthalmus 群体也通过产生更多的士兵等级进行了调整。通过更多的士兵进行防御的更大投入对竞争对手群体的建立和规模产生了负面影响。然而,竞争对手的存在降低了 Philophthalmus 群体的适应性(感染阶段的产量),尽管通过产生更多的士兵可以减轻这种影响。我们的研究结果表明,具有分工的吸虫群体能够根据竞争的感知威胁和实际竞争做出适应性的等级比例调整,只有当士兵数量非常高时,繁殖成功的权衡才会出现。结合对社会性昆虫的研究结果,我们的研究表明,在系统发育上不同的生物体中,殖民地生物具有类似的适应能力。

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