Do facultative symbionts affect fitness of pea aphids in the sexual generation?

Many aphids carry one or more facultative symbiotic bacteria which can provide a variety of fitness benefits for their hosts. They have chiefly been investigated in asexually reproducing aphids, with studies of the sexual generation limited to investigation of transmission rates and the potential fo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McLean, A, Ferrari, J, Godfray, H
Format: Journal article
Published: Wiley 2018
_version_ 1797068931894083584
author McLean, A
Ferrari, J
Godfray, H
author_facet McLean, A
Ferrari, J
Godfray, H
author_sort McLean, A
collection OXFORD
description Many aphids carry one or more facultative symbiotic bacteria which can provide a variety of fitness benefits for their hosts. They have chiefly been investigated in asexually reproducing aphids, with studies of the sexual generation limited to investigation of transmission rates and the potential for sex ratio manipulation. The effects of two facultative symbionts on the mating success of pea aphids, Acyrthosiphon pisum Harris (Hemiptera: Aphididae, Macrosiphini), were investigated in a no‐choice experiment. We compared the fitness of aphids with natural infections of either Regiella insecticola Moran et al. or Hamiltonella defensa Moran et al. with that of aphids from genetically identical cured lines. Female fecundity was unaffected by the presence of facultative symbionts. However, females mated to males cured of H. defensa laid fewer eggs on average than females mated to males carrying H. defensa; in one case the percentage of melanized eggs (eggs that were either not fertilized or in which early death occurred) was also smaller with cured compared to naturally infected males. In addition, males with H. defensa suffered higher mortality during the experiment than cured males. Four of the aphid lines used also hosted Spiroplasma infections, a symbiont previously reported to cause male‐killing in pea aphids. Despite this, three of the Spiroplasma‐infected lines produced males, two at high numbers. We conclude that removing a natural symbiont infection may have a negative fitness effect on male aphids in some aphid clones, whereas sexual females from the same clones are largely unaffected.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T22:17:07Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:53c04c84-b91f-4828-a195-065154ba490a
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T22:17:07Z
publishDate 2018
publisher Wiley
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:53c04c84-b91f-4828-a195-065154ba490a2022-03-26T16:33:42ZDo facultative symbionts affect fitness of pea aphids in the sexual generation?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:53c04c84-b91f-4828-a195-065154ba490aSymplectic Elements at OxfordWiley2018McLean, AFerrari, JGodfray, HMany aphids carry one or more facultative symbiotic bacteria which can provide a variety of fitness benefits for their hosts. They have chiefly been investigated in asexually reproducing aphids, with studies of the sexual generation limited to investigation of transmission rates and the potential for sex ratio manipulation. The effects of two facultative symbionts on the mating success of pea aphids, Acyrthosiphon pisum Harris (Hemiptera: Aphididae, Macrosiphini), were investigated in a no‐choice experiment. We compared the fitness of aphids with natural infections of either Regiella insecticola Moran et al. or Hamiltonella defensa Moran et al. with that of aphids from genetically identical cured lines. Female fecundity was unaffected by the presence of facultative symbionts. However, females mated to males cured of H. defensa laid fewer eggs on average than females mated to males carrying H. defensa; in one case the percentage of melanized eggs (eggs that were either not fertilized or in which early death occurred) was also smaller with cured compared to naturally infected males. In addition, males with H. defensa suffered higher mortality during the experiment than cured males. Four of the aphid lines used also hosted Spiroplasma infections, a symbiont previously reported to cause male‐killing in pea aphids. Despite this, three of the Spiroplasma‐infected lines produced males, two at high numbers. We conclude that removing a natural symbiont infection may have a negative fitness effect on male aphids in some aphid clones, whereas sexual females from the same clones are largely unaffected.
spellingShingle McLean, A
Ferrari, J
Godfray, H
Do facultative symbionts affect fitness of pea aphids in the sexual generation?
title Do facultative symbionts affect fitness of pea aphids in the sexual generation?
title_full Do facultative symbionts affect fitness of pea aphids in the sexual generation?
title_fullStr Do facultative symbionts affect fitness of pea aphids in the sexual generation?
title_full_unstemmed Do facultative symbionts affect fitness of pea aphids in the sexual generation?
title_short Do facultative symbionts affect fitness of pea aphids in the sexual generation?
title_sort do facultative symbionts affect fitness of pea aphids in the sexual generation
work_keys_str_mv AT mcleana dofacultativesymbiontsaffectfitnessofpeaaphidsinthesexualgeneration
AT ferrarij dofacultativesymbiontsaffectfitnessofpeaaphidsinthesexualgeneration
AT godfrayh dofacultativesymbiontsaffectfitnessofpeaaphidsinthesexualgeneration