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当雄性稀少时,非洲女王蜂会寻找配偶。

African Queens find mates when males are rare.

作者信息

Rutagarama Vincent P, Ireri Piera M, Sibomana Constantin, Omufwoko Kennedy S, Martin Simon H, Ffrench-Constant Richard H, Eckardt Winnie, Kaplin Beth K, Smith David A S, Gordon Ian

机构信息

Department of Biology, College of Science and Technology University of Rwanda Kigali Rwanda.

International Centre for Insect Physiology and Ecology Nairobi Kenya.

出版信息

Ecol Evol. 2023 Apr 2;13(4):e9956. doi: 10.1002/ece3.9956. eCollection 2023 Apr.

Abstract

In butterflies and moths, male-killing endosymbionts are transmitted from infected females via their eggs, and the male progeny then perish. This means that successful transmission of the parasite relies on the successful mating of the host. Paradoxically, at the population level, parasite transmission also reduces the number of adult males present in the final population for infected females to mate with. Here we investigate if successful female mating when males are rare is indeed a likely rate-limiting step in the transmission of male-killing in the African Monarch, . In Lepidoptera, successful pairings are hallmarked by the transfer of a sperm-containing spermatophore from the male to the female during copulation. Conveniently, this spermatophore remains detectable within the female upon dissection, and thus, spermatophore counts can be used to assess the frequency of successful mating in the field. We used such spermatophore counts to examine if altered sex ratios in the do indeed affect female mating success. We examined two different field sites in East Africa where males were often rare. Surprisingly, mated females carried an average of 1.5 spermatophores each, regardless of male frequency, and importantly, only 10-20% remained unmated. This suggests that infected females will still be able to mate in the face of either -mediated male killing and/or fluctuations in adult sex ratio over the wet-dry season cycle. These observations may begin to explain how the male-killing mollicute can still be successfully transmitted in a population where males are rare.

摘要

在蝴蝶和飞蛾中,杀雄内共生菌通过受感染的雌性经由其卵进行传播,随后雄性后代死亡。这意味着寄生虫的成功传播依赖于宿主的成功交配。矛盾的是,在种群水平上,寄生虫的传播也减少了最终种群中可供受感染雌性与之交配的成年雄性数量。在此,我们研究当雄性稀少时雌性成功交配是否确实是非洲君主斑蝶中杀雄传播的一个可能的限速步骤。在鳞翅目中,成功配对的标志是在交配过程中雄性向雌性传递一个含有精子的精包。方便的是,这个精包在解剖雌性时仍可检测到,因此,精包计数可用于评估野外成功交配的频率。我们利用这种精包计数来检验非洲君主斑蝶性别比例的改变是否确实会影响雌性的交配成功率。我们在东非的两个不同野外地点进行了研究,在那里雄性通常很稀少。令人惊讶的是,无论雄性频率如何,已交配的雌性平均每个携带1.5个精包,重要的是,只有10% - 20%的雌性仍未交配。这表明面对由细菌介导的杀雄现象和/或在干湿季节循环中成年性别比例的波动,受感染的雌性仍然能够交配。这些观察结果可能开始解释杀雄支原体在雄性稀少的种群中仍能成功传播的原因。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/7942/10067808/2079ad465227/ECE3-13-e9956-g001.jpg

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