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一种寄生蝇对快速进化的宿主信号的行为反应。

Behavioral responses of a parasitoid fly to rapidly evolving host signals.

作者信息

Broder E Dale, Gallagher James H, Wikle Aaron W, Venable Cameron P, Zonana David M, Ingley Spencer J, Smith Tanner C, Tinghitella Robin M

机构信息

Department of Biology University of Denver Denver Colorado USA.

Brigham Young University-Hawaii Laie Hawaii USA.

出版信息

Ecol Evol. 2022 Aug 11;12(8):e9193. doi: 10.1002/ece3.9193. eCollection 2022 Aug.

Abstract

Animals eavesdrop on signals and cues generated by prey, predators, hosts, parasites, competing species, and conspecifics, and the conspicuousness of sexual signals makes them particularly susceptible. Yet, when sexual signals evolve, most attention is paid to impacts on intended receivers (potential mates) rather than fitness consequences for eavesdroppers. Using the rapidly evolving interaction between the Pacific field cricket, , and the parasitoid fly, , we asked how parasitoids initially respond to novel changes in host signals. We recently discovered a novel sexual signal, purring song, in Hawaiian populations of that appears to have evolved because it protects the cricket from the parasitoid while still allowing males to attract female crickets for mating. In Hawaii, there are no known alternative hosts for the parasitoid, so we would expect flies to be under selection to detect and attend to the new purring song. We used complementary field and laboratory phonotaxis experiments to test fly responses to purring songs that varied in many dimensions, as well as to ancestral song. We found that flies strongly prefer ancestral song over purring songs in both the field and the lab, but we caught more flies to purring songs in the field than reported in previous work, indicating that flies may be exerting some selective pressure on the novel song. When played at realistic amplitudes, we found no preferences-flies responded equally to all purrs that varied in frequency, broadbandedness, and temporal measures. However, our lab experiment did reveal the first evidence of preference for purring song amplitude, as flies were more attracted to purrs played at amplitudes greater than naturally occurring purring songs. As purring becomes more common throughout Hawaii, flies that can use purring song to locate hosts should be favored by selection and increase in frequency.

摘要

动物会窃听猎物、捕食者、宿主、寄生虫、竞争物种和同种个体产生的信号和线索,而性信号的显著特征使其特别容易被察觉。然而,当性信号进化时,大多数关注都集中在对预期接收者(潜在配偶)的影响上,而非对窃听者适合度的影响。利用太平洋田蟋与寄生蝇之间快速进化的相互作用,我们研究了寄生蝇最初如何对宿主信号的新变化做出反应。我们最近在夏威夷的田蟋种群中发现了一种新的性信号——呼噜声,它似乎是进化而来的,因为它在保护田蟋免受寄生蝇侵害的同时,仍能让雄性吸引雌性田蟋进行交配。在夏威夷,已知没有该寄生蝇的替代宿主,所以我们预计寄生蝇会受到选择压力,从而能够检测并关注这种新的呼噜声。我们使用了互补的野外和实验室趋声实验,来测试寄生蝇对在多个维度上变化的呼噜声以及祖先鸣声的反应。我们发现,在野外和实验室中,寄生蝇都强烈偏好祖先鸣声而非呼噜声,但我们在野外捕捉到对呼噜声有反应的寄生蝇比之前研究报告的更多,这表明寄生蝇可能正在对这种新鸣声施加某种选择压力。当以实际振幅播放时,我们发现寄生蝇没有偏好——它们对所有在频率、宽带特性和时间测量方面有所不同的呼噜声反应相同。然而,我们的实验室实验确实首次揭示了寄生蝇对呼噜声振幅有偏好的证据,因为寄生蝇更被以大于自然呼噜声振幅播放的呼噜声所吸引。随着呼噜声在夏威夷变得越来越普遍,能够利用呼噜声来定位宿主的寄生蝇应该会受到选择青睐并在数量上增加。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ca86/9366563/26500ae3b27c/ECE3-12-e9193-g003.jpg

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