Dispersal From Natal Patch Correlates With the Volatility of Female Sex Pheromones in Parasitoid Wasps

Chemical communication via pheromones is considered the oldest and most widespread form of communication in nature. However, the way that the enormous diversity of species-specific pheromones evolved is still of debate. One possible process driving pheromone evolution is the mate-finding and dispers...

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Main Authors: Lea C. Böttinger, Johannes Stökl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2020.557527/full
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author Lea C. Böttinger
Johannes Stökl
author_facet Lea C. Böttinger
Johannes Stökl
author_sort Lea C. Böttinger
collection DOAJ
description Chemical communication via pheromones is considered the oldest and most widespread form of communication in nature. However, the way that the enormous diversity of species-specific pheromones evolved is still of debate. One possible process driving pheromone evolution is the mate-finding and dispersal behavior, as long-distance mate-finding requires highly volatile compounds. In contrast, less volatile compounds might be sufficient attractants in species that search for mates within proximity. In the parasitoid wasp genus Leptopilina, the composition of species-specific sex pheromones ranges from highly volatile iridoid compounds through combinations of iridoids with low volatile cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) to only CHCs. To study the selective forces shaping the composition of sex pheromones in Leptopilina, we examined the dispersal behavior, i.e., the proportion of male and female wasps dispersing after emergence, in four species with known sex pheromone compositions. If males and females disperse immediately, long-range mate attraction might become necessary, favoring volatile iridoids over CHCs. If mating occurs directly on the host patch, short-range mate attraction by low volatile CHCs might suffice. Our analyses have revealed that the dispersal behavior of Leptopilina males and females after emergence does indeed differ between species with differently volatile sex pheromones. Specifically, males of species with iridoid sex pheromones start to disperse immediately before their females’ emergence, whereas males of species with CHC sex pheromones delay dispersal until their conspecific females emerge. While the differences in female dispersal behavior turned out to be species-specific, differences in male dispersal correlated with the volatility of female-produced sex pheromones of each species. This study significantly contributes to our understanding of the evolution of sex pheromones by differences in dispersal behavior.
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spelling doaj.art-d24dc85317c744febf7836178943f83c2022-12-22T01:32:43ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution2296-701X2020-10-01810.3389/fevo.2020.557527557527Dispersal From Natal Patch Correlates With the Volatility of Female Sex Pheromones in Parasitoid WaspsLea C. BöttingerJohannes StöklChemical communication via pheromones is considered the oldest and most widespread form of communication in nature. However, the way that the enormous diversity of species-specific pheromones evolved is still of debate. One possible process driving pheromone evolution is the mate-finding and dispersal behavior, as long-distance mate-finding requires highly volatile compounds. In contrast, less volatile compounds might be sufficient attractants in species that search for mates within proximity. In the parasitoid wasp genus Leptopilina, the composition of species-specific sex pheromones ranges from highly volatile iridoid compounds through combinations of iridoids with low volatile cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) to only CHCs. To study the selective forces shaping the composition of sex pheromones in Leptopilina, we examined the dispersal behavior, i.e., the proportion of male and female wasps dispersing after emergence, in four species with known sex pheromone compositions. If males and females disperse immediately, long-range mate attraction might become necessary, favoring volatile iridoids over CHCs. If mating occurs directly on the host patch, short-range mate attraction by low volatile CHCs might suffice. Our analyses have revealed that the dispersal behavior of Leptopilina males and females after emergence does indeed differ between species with differently volatile sex pheromones. Specifically, males of species with iridoid sex pheromones start to disperse immediately before their females’ emergence, whereas males of species with CHC sex pheromones delay dispersal until their conspecific females emerge. While the differences in female dispersal behavior turned out to be species-specific, differences in male dispersal correlated with the volatility of female-produced sex pheromones of each species. This study significantly contributes to our understanding of the evolution of sex pheromones by differences in dispersal behavior.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2020.557527/fullsex pheromonemating systemevolutionchemical communicationinsectsLeptopilina
spellingShingle Lea C. Böttinger
Johannes Stökl
Dispersal From Natal Patch Correlates With the Volatility of Female Sex Pheromones in Parasitoid Wasps
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
sex pheromone
mating system
evolution
chemical communication
insects
Leptopilina
title Dispersal From Natal Patch Correlates With the Volatility of Female Sex Pheromones in Parasitoid Wasps
title_full Dispersal From Natal Patch Correlates With the Volatility of Female Sex Pheromones in Parasitoid Wasps
title_fullStr Dispersal From Natal Patch Correlates With the Volatility of Female Sex Pheromones in Parasitoid Wasps
title_full_unstemmed Dispersal From Natal Patch Correlates With the Volatility of Female Sex Pheromones in Parasitoid Wasps
title_short Dispersal From Natal Patch Correlates With the Volatility of Female Sex Pheromones in Parasitoid Wasps
title_sort dispersal from natal patch correlates with the volatility of female sex pheromones in parasitoid wasps
topic sex pheromone
mating system
evolution
chemical communication
insects
Leptopilina
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2020.557527/full
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