Kapila Rohit, Poddar Soumyadip, Meena Neeraj, Prasad Nagaraj Guru
Department of Biological Sciences, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Mohali, Sector 81, SAS Nagar, PO Manauli, Mohali, Punjab 140306, India.
Curr Res Insect Sci. 2021 Dec 15;2:100027. doi: 10.1016/j.cris.2021.100027. eCollection 2022.
In many insects, the larval environment is confined to the egg-laying site, which often leads to crowded larval conditions, exposing the developing larvae to poor resource availability and toxic metabolic wastes. Larval crowding imposes two opposing selection pressures. On one hand, due to poor nutritional resources during developmental stages, adults from the crowded larval environment have reduced investment in reproductive tissues. On the other hand, a crowded larval environment acts as a cue for future reproductive competition inducing increased investment in reproductive tissues. Both these selection pressures are likely affected by the level of crowding. The evolutionary consequence of adaptation to larval crowding environment on adult reproductive investment is bound to be a result of the interaction of these two opposing forces. In this study, we used experimentally evolved populations of adapted to larval crowding to investigate the effect of adaptation to larval crowding on investment in reproductive organs (testes and accessory glands) of males. Our results show that there is a strong effect of larval developmental environment on absolute sizes of testes and accessory glands. However, there was no effect of the developmental environment when testis size was scaled by body size. We also found that flies from crowded cultures had smaller accessory gland sizes relative to body size. Moreover, the sizes of the reproductive organs were not affected by the selection histories of the populations. This study highlights that adaptation to two extremely different developmental environments does not affect the patterns of reproductive investment. We discuss the possibility that differential investment in reproductive tissues could be influenced by the mating dynamics and/or investment in larval survival traits, rather than just the developmental environment of the populations.
在许多昆虫中,幼虫的生存环境局限于产卵地点,这常常导致幼虫生存环境拥挤,使发育中的幼虫面临资源匮乏和有毒代谢废物的问题。幼虫拥挤会产生两种相反的选择压力。一方面,由于发育阶段营养资源匮乏,来自拥挤幼虫环境的成虫对生殖组织的投入减少。另一方面,拥挤的幼虫环境是未来生殖竞争的一个信号,会促使对生殖组织的投入增加。这两种选择压力可能都受到拥挤程度的影响。适应幼虫拥挤环境对成虫生殖投入的进化后果必然是这两种相反力量相互作用的结果。在本研究中,我们使用经过实验进化以适应幼虫拥挤的种群,来研究适应幼虫拥挤对雄性生殖器官(睾丸和附腺)投入的影响。我们的结果表明,幼虫发育环境对睾丸和附腺的绝对大小有很强的影响。然而,当睾丸大小按体型进行缩放时,发育环境没有影响。我们还发现,来自拥挤培养环境的果蝇相对于体型而言附腺较小。此外,生殖器官的大小不受种群选择历史的影响。这项研究强调,适应两种截然不同的发育环境不会影响生殖投入模式。我们讨论了生殖组织差异投入可能受交配动态和/或幼虫生存性状投入影响的可能性,而不仅仅是种群的发育环境。