cuticular hydrocarbon
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Parmentier ◽  
Miquel Gaju-Ricart ◽  
Tom Wenseleers ◽  
Rafael Molero-Baltanás

Abstract Background Host range is a fundamental trait to understand the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of symbionts. Increasing host specificity is expected to be accompanied with specialization in different symbiont traits. We tested this specificity-specialization association in a large group of 16 ant-associated silverfish species by linking their level of host specificity with their degree of behavioural integration into the colony and their accuracy of chemically deceiving the host’s recognition system, i.e. the cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) profile. Results As expected, facultative associates and host generalists (targeting multiple unrelated ants) tend to avoid the host, whereas host-specialists (typically restricted to Messor ants) were bolder, approached the host and allowed inspection. Generalists and host specialists regularly followed a host worker, unlike the other silverfish. Host aggression was extremely high toward non-ant-associated silverfish and modest to low in ant-associated groups. Surprisingly, the degree of chemical deception was not linked with host specificity as most silverfish, including facultative ant associates, imitated the host’s CHC profile. Messor specialists retained the same CHC profile as the host after moulting, in contrast to a host generalist, suggesting an active production of the cues (chemical mimicry). Host generalist and facultative associates flexibly copied the highly different CHC profiles of alternative host species, pointing at passive acquisition (chemical camouflage) of the host’s odour. Conclusions Overall, we found that behaviour that seems to facilitate the integration in the host colony was more pronounced in host specialist silverfish. Chemical deception, however, was employed by all ant-associated species, irrespective of their degree of host specificity.


Author(s):  
Débora E Moriconi ◽  
Catarina Macedo-Lopes ◽  
Adriana Sartorio ◽  
M Patricia Juárez ◽  
Juan R Girotti ◽  
...  

Abstract The Triatoma sordida subcomplex traditionally included four triatomine species, T. sordida, Triatoma garciabesi, Triatoma guasayana, and Triatoma patagonica, distributed in the Southern Cone of South America. These species have a large intraspecific variability together with an overall similarity, making difficult to establish their taxonomic status. Many cytogenetic, morphometric, and molecular markers have been applied to address this. Recent studies have posed concerns on the inclusion of T. guasayana and T. patagonica within the subcomplex. Also, T. sordida from Argentina has been designed as a new species, Triatoma rosai. Using the cuticular hydrocarbon pattern as chemotaxonomic marker, the relationships among several populations of these species were analyzed by capillary gas chromatography and linear discriminant analysis along 25 collection sites in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, and Paraguay. T. sordida and T. rosai populations were differentially clustered in two CHC-based groups: “Group 1” included T. sordida from Eastern Brazil, Eastern Paraguay, and the Bolivian populations from La Paz and Izozog G1; “Group 2” included T. rosai, and T. sordida from Izozog G2 (Bolivia), and Western Paraguay. Whereas T. garciabesi remained closely related to T. sordida and T. rosai, T. guasayana, and T. patagonica were clearly separated from the species of the T. sordida subcomplex. Our results agree with those from other several techniques suggesting that the taxonomy of the T. sordida subcomplex should be revised.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria C. Moris ◽  
Lars Podsiadlowski ◽  
Sebastian Martin ◽  
Jan Philip Oeyen ◽  
Alexander Donath ◽  
...  

Cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) cover the cuticle of insects and serve as desiccation barrier and for chemical communication. While the main enzymatic steps of CHC biosynthesis are well understood, few of the underlying genes have been identified. Here we show how exploitation of intrasexual CHC dimorphism in a mason wasp, Odynerus spinipes, in combination with whole-genome sequencing and comparative transcriptomics facilitated identification of such genes. RNAi-mediated knockdown of twelve candidate gene orthologs in honey bees, Apis mellifera, confirmed nine genes impacting CHC profile composition. Most of them have predicted functions consistent with current knowledge of CHC metabolism. However, we found first-time evidence for a fatty acid amide hydrolase also influencing CHC profile composition. In situ hybridization experiments furthermore suggest trophocytes participating in CHC biosynthesis. Our results set the base for experimental CHC profile manipulation in Hymenoptera and imply that the evolutionary origin of CHC biosynthesis predates the arthropods' colonization of land.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheng-Kai Hsu ◽  
Wei-Yun Lai ◽  
Johannes Novak ◽  
Felix Lehner ◽  
Ana Marija Jakšić ◽  
...  

Ambient temperature is one major ecological factor driving adaptation in natural populations, but its impact on the emergence of new species is not yet clear. Here, we explored the evolution of reproductive isolation during temperature adaptation by exposing 10 replicate Drosophila simulans populations to a hot temperature regime. Within less than 200 generations, both pre- and post-mating reproductive isolation evolved. The altered lipid metabolism of evolved flies also affected the cuticular hydrocarbon (CHCs) profiles. Different CHC profiles could explain the emerged assortative mating between ancestral and evolved populations. Hence, we identified the hallmark of ecological speciation driven by temperature adaptation. While this pre-mating isolation occurred only between ancestral and evolved replicate populations, post-mating reproductive isolation was observed among evolved replicate populations. We propose that epistatic interactions of reproduction-related genes between males and females resulted in adaptive co-evolution. Incompatibilities between different gene combinations favored in each replicate could explain the observed post-mating reproductive isolation. We anticipate that this mutation-order-like speciation from standing genetic variation, a new speciation process, is widespread in nature when highly polygenic traits are involved in adaptation.


Author(s):  
Rubi Meza-Lázaro ◽  
Kenzy Peña-Carrillo ◽  
Chantal Poteaux ◽  
Maria Lorenzi ◽  
James Wetterer ◽  
...  

Reproductive isolation between geographically separated populations is generally considered the most common form of speciation. However, speciation may also occur in the absence of geographic barriers due phenotypic and genotypic factors such as chemical cue divergence, mating signal divergence and mitonuclear conflict. Here we performed an integrative study based on two genome-wide techniques, 3RAD and ultraconserved elements, coupled with cuticular hydrocarbon and mtDNA sequence data, to assess the species limits within the E. ruidum species-complex, a widespread and conspicuous group of Neotropical ants for which heteroplasmy has been recently discovered in some populations from southeast Mexico. Our analyses indicate the existence of at least five distinct species in this complex, two widely distributed along the Neotropics and three that are restricted to southeast Mexico and that apparently have high levels of heteroplasmy. We found that species boundaries in the complex did not coincide with geographic barriers. We therefore consider possible roles of alternative drivers that may have promoted the observed patterns of speciation, including mitonuclear incompatibility, cuticular hydrocarbon differentiation, and colony structure. Our study highlights the importance of simultaneously assessing different sources of evidence to disentangle the species limits of taxa with complicated evolutionary histories.


Author(s):  
David Baracchi ◽  
Martin Giurfa ◽  
Patrizia d'Ettorre

Decision-making processes face the dilemma of being accurate or faster, a phenomenon that has been described as speed-accuracy trade-off in numerous studies on animal behaviour. In social insects, discriminating between colony members and aliens is subjected to this trade-off as rapid and accurate rejection of enemies is of primary importance for the maintenance and ecological success of insect societies. Recognition cues distinguishing aliens from nestmates are embedded in the cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) layer and vary among colonies. In walking carpenter ants, exposure to formic acid (FA), an alarm pheromone, improves accuracy of nestmate recognition by decreasing both alien acceptance and nestmate rejection. Here we studied the effect of FA exposure on the spontaneous aggressive mandible opening response of harnessed Camponotus aethiops ants presented with either nestmate or alien CHCs. FA modulated both MOR accuracy and the latency to respond to odours of conspecifics. In particular, FA decreased MOR towards nestmates but increased it towards aliens. Furthermore, FA decreased MOR latency towards aliens but not towards nestmates. As response latency can be used as a proxy of response speed, we conclude that contrary to the prediction of the speed-accuracy trade-off theory, ants did not trade off speed against accuracy in the process of nestmate recognition.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Corinne Hertaeg ◽  
Marion Risse ◽  
Christoph Vorburger ◽  
Consuelo M. De Moraes ◽  
Mark C. Mescher

AbstractCuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) have important communicative functions for ants, which use CHC profiles to recognize mutualistic aphid partners. Aphid endosymbionts can influence the quality of their hosts as ant mutualists, via effects on honeydew composition, and might also affect CHC profiles, suggesting that ants could potentially use CHC cues to discriminate among aphid lines harbouring different endosymbionts. We explored how several strains of Hamiltonella defensa and Regiella insecticola influence the CHC profiles of host aphids (Aphis fabae) and the ability of aphid-tending ants (Lasius niger) to distinguish the profiles of aphids hosting different endosymbionts. We found significant compositional differences between the CHCs of aphids with different infections. Some endosymbionts changed the proportions of odd-chain linear alkanes, while others changed primarily methyl-branched compounds, which may be particularly important for communication. Behavioural assays, in which we trained ants to associate CHC profiles of endosymbiont infected or uninfected aphids with food rewards, revealed that ants readily learned to distinguish differences in aphid CHC profiles associated with variation in endosymbiont strains. While previous work has documented endosymbiont effects on aphid interactions with antagonists, the current findings support the hypothesis that endosymbionts also alter traits that influence communicative interactions with ant mutualists.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samridhi Chaturvedi ◽  
Zachariah Gompert ◽  
Jeffrey Feder ◽  
Owen Osborne ◽  
Moritz Muschick ◽  
...  

Abstract Evolution can repeat itself, resulting in parallel adaptations in independent lineages occupying similar environments. Moreover, parallel evolution sometimes, but not always, uses the same genes. Two main hypotheses have been put forth to explain the probability and extent of parallel evolution. First, parallel evolution is more likely when shared ecologies result in similar patterns of natural selection in different taxa. Second, parallelism is more likely when genomes are similar, because of shared standing variation and similar mutational effects in closely related genomes. Here we combine ecological, genomic, experimental, and phenotypic data with randomization tests and Bayesian modeling to quantify the degree of parallelism and study its relationship with ecology and genetics. Our results show that the probability of parallel adaptation to climate among species of Timema stick insects is shaped collectively by shared ecology and genomic background. Specifically, the probability of genetic parallelism decays with divergence in climatic (i.e., ecological) conditions and genomic similarity. Moreover, we find that climate-associated loci are likely subject to selection in a field experiment, overlap with genetic regions associated with cuticular hydrocarbon traits, and are not strongly shaped by introgression between species. Our findings shed light on when evolution is most expected to repeat itself.


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