生态上不同谱系臭虫的年龄相关交配率。

IF 2.6 2区 生物学 Q1 ZOOLOGY
Tomáš Bartonička, Jana Křemenová, Ondřej Balvín, Zdeněk Šimek, Oliver Otti
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引用次数: 0

摘要

了解一只动物一生中有多少配偶是性选择的一个关键因素。同时,生物生态的差异,比如食物的数量和质量,可以反映在不同的交配率上。交配率对雌性净适合度(即终生后代产量)有显著影响,然而,实验室测量不能很好地反映野生情况。普通臭虫(Cimex lectularius)是研究创伤性授精和性冲突的成熟模型。该物种包括两个寄主谱系,以蝙蝠(BL)或人类(HL)为食。HL可以全年不断地以人类宿主为食,而bl只在夏季的几个月里,当它们的蝙蝠宿主占据栖息地时进食。由于雌性臭虫的交配与觅食密切相关,该系统为研究交配变化提供了一个有价值的模型。我们建立了一种新的方法来估计野生雌性的年龄依赖性交配率,通过将雌性眼睛中的荧光色素积累与交配疤痕的数量联系起来,这些疤痕表现为雄性通过雌性腹部壁将精子注射到精子中造成的黑化斑点。此外,利用实验室臭虫,我们发现平均3.5次观察到的交配会导致一个观察到的黑化交配疤痕。尽管年轻的BL和HL雌性(蝶啶浓度低)在交配次数上没有差异,但交配率随年龄的增长只在HL雌性中增加,而在BL雌性中没有。我们抽样的平均年龄BL比HL女性大。冬季缺乏食物(蝙蝠血)可以解释BL中疤痕数量随年龄增长而增加的原因。在交配留下明显痕迹的物种中,使用荧光色素确定雌性年龄(适用于大多数节肢动物)可能是研究野生性选择和交配率的重要工具。该方法可以帮助制定可持续的和生物学上清晰的方法来控制它们。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Age-related mating rates among ecologically distinct lineages of bedbugs, Cimex lectularius.

Age-related mating rates among ecologically distinct lineages of bedbugs, Cimex lectularius.

Age-related mating rates among ecologically distinct lineages of bedbugs, Cimex lectularius.

Understanding how many mates an animal has in its lifetime is a critical factor in sexual selection. At the same time, differences in an organism's ecology, such as the quantity and quality of food, could be reflected in different mating rates. Mating rate had a significant effect on female net fitness (i.e., lifetime offspring production), however, laboratory measurements cannot well mirror the situation in wild. The common bedbug (Cimex lectularius) is a well-established model for studying traumatic insemination and sexual conflict. The species comprises two host lineages that feed on bats (BL) or humans (HL). HL can constantly feed on human hosts throughout the year, while BLs feed only during summer months when their bat hosts occupy the roosts. Because mating in female bedbugs is closely linked to foraging, this system provides a valuable model to study mating variation in the field. We established a new method for estimating age-dependent mating rates of females in the wild by relating the fluorescent pigment accumulation in the eyes of females to the number of mating scars that manifest as melanized spots caused by the injection of sperm through the wall of the female abdomen by the male into the spermalege. In addition, using laboratory bedbugs we found that three and a half observed matings on average lead to one observed melanized mating scar. Although young BL and HL females (with low pteridine concentrations) did not differ in the number of matings, the mating rate increased with age only in HL but not in BL females. We sampled on average older BL than HL females. The lack of access to food (bat blood) during winter could explain the lack of increase in the number of scars with age in BL. In species where mating leaves visible marks, using fluorescent pigments to determine female age (applicable to most arthropods) could be an important tool to study sexual selection and mating rate in the wild. The method can help formulate sustainable and biologically lucid approaches for their control.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Zoology is an open access, peer-reviewed online journal publishing high quality research articles and reviews on all aspects of animal life. As a biological discipline, zoology has one of the longest histories. Today it occasionally appears as though, due to the rapid expansion of life sciences, zoology has been replaced by more or less independent sub-disciplines amongst which exchange is often sparse. However, the recent advance of molecular methodology into "classical" fields of biology, and the development of theories that can explain phenomena on different levels of organisation, has led to a re-integration of zoological disciplines promoting a broader than usual approach to zoological questions. Zoology has re-emerged as an integrative discipline encompassing the most diverse aspects of animal life, from the level of the gene to the level of the ecosystem. Frontiers in Zoology is the first open access journal focusing on zoology as a whole. It aims to represent and re-unite the various disciplines that look at animal life from different perspectives and at providing the basis for a comprehensive understanding of zoological phenomena on all levels of analysis. Frontiers in Zoology provides a unique opportunity to publish high quality research and reviews on zoological issues that will be internationally accessible to any reader at no cost. The journal was initiated and is supported by the Deutsche Zoologische Gesellschaft, one of the largest national zoological societies with more than a century-long tradition in promoting high-level zoological research.
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