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« Previous AbstractAn oral male courtship pheromone terminates the response of Nasonia vitripennis females to the male-produced sex attractant    Next AbstractPheromone research--still something to write home about »

PLoS One


Title:Pheromone diversification and age-dependent behavioural plasticity decrease interspecific mating costs in Nasonia
Author(s):Ruther J; McCaw J; Bocher L; Pothmann D; Putz I;
Address:"Institute for Zoology, University of Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany"
Journal Title:PLoS One
Year:2014
Volume:20140214
Issue:2
Page Number:e89214 -
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0089214
ISSN/ISBN:1932-6203 (Electronic) 1932-6203 (Linking)
Abstract:"Interspecific mating can cause severe fitness costs due to the fact that hybrids are often non-viable or less fit. Thus, theory predicts the selection of traits that lessen reproductive interactions between closely related sympatric species. Males of the parasitic wasp Nasonia vitripennis differ from all other Nasonia species by an additional sex pheromone component, but the ecological selective forces underlying this pheromone diversification are unknown. Here we present data from lab experiments suggesting that costly interspecific sexual interactions with the sympatric species N. giraulti might have been responsible for the pheromone evolution and some courtship-related behavioural adaptations in N. vitripennis. Most N. giraulti females are inseminated already within the host, but N. giraulti males still invest in costly sex pheromones after emergence. Furthermore, they do not discriminate between N. vitripennis females and conspecifics during courtship. Therefore, N. vitripennis females, most of which emerge as virgins, face the risk of mating with N. giraulti resulting in costly all-male broods due to Wolbachia-induced cytoplasmic incompatibility. As a counter adaptation, young N. vitripennis females discriminate against N. giraulti males using the more complex conspecific sex pheromone and reject most of them during courtship. With increasing age, however, N. vitripennis females become less choosy, but often compensate mating errors by re-mating with a conspecific. By doing so, they can principally avoid suboptimal offspring sex ratios, but a microcosm experiment suggests that under more natural conditions N. vitripennis females cannot completely avoid fitness costs due to heterospecific mating. Our study provides support for the hypothesis that communication interference of closely related sympatric species using similar sexual signals can generate selective pressures that lead to their divergence"
Keywords:"Aging/drug effects/*physiology Animals Biological Assay Female Male Mating Preference, Animal/*drug effects Models, Biological Olfactometry Sex Attractants/*pharmacology Sex Ratio Sexual Behavior, Animal/*drug effects Species Specificity Wasps/drug effect;"
Notes:"MedlineRuther, Joachim McCaw, Jennifer Bocher, Lisa Pothmann, Daniela Putz, Irina eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't 2014/02/20 PLoS One. 2014 Feb 14; 9(2):e89214. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0089214. eCollection 2014"

 
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