Wolbachia and host intrinsic reproductive barriers contribute additively to post-mating isolation in spider mites. Wolbachia and host intrinsic reproductive barriers contribute additively to post-mating isolation in spider mites: Ver. 5 peer-reviewed and recommended by PCI Evolutionary Biology

Archive ouverte

Cruz, Miguel, A. | Magalhães, Sara | Sucena, Élio | Zélé, Flore

Edité par CCSD -

Wolbachia are widespread maternally-inherited bacteria suggested to play a role in arthropod host speciation through induction of cytoplasmic incompatibility, but this hypothesis remains controversial. Most studies addressing Wolbachia -induced incompatibilities concern closely-related populations, which are intrinsically compatible. Here, we used three populations of two genetically differentiated colour forms of the haplodiploid spider mite Tetranychus urticae to dissect the interaction between Wolbachia -induced and host-associated incompatibilities, and to assess their relative contribution to post-mating isolation. We found that these two sources of incompatibility act through different mechanisms in an additive fashion. Host-associated incompatibility contributes 1.5 times more than Wolbachia -induced incompatibility in reducing hybrid production, the former through an overproduction of haploid sons at the expense of diploid daugters ( ca . 75% decrease) and the latter by increasing the embryonic mortality of daughters (by ca . 49%). Furthermore, regardless of cross direction, we observed near-complete F1 hybrid sterility and complete F2 hybrid breakdown between populations of the two forms, but that Wolbachia did not contribute to this outcome. This study identifies the mechanistic independence and additive nature of host-intrinsic and Wolbachia -induced sources of isolation. It suggests that Wolbachia could drive reproductive isolation in this system, thereby potentially affecting host differentiation and distribution in the field.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Wolbachia and host intrinsic reproductive barriers contribute additively to postmating isolation in spider mites

Archive ouverte | Cruz, Miguel, A. | CCSD

International audience. Wolbachia are maternally-inherited bacteria that induce cytoplasmic incompatibility in many arthropod species. However, the ubiquity of this isolation mechanism for host speciation processes ...

Wolbachia strengthens the match between premating and early postmating isolation in spider mites

Archive ouverte | Cruz, Miguel, A | CCSD

International audience. Endosymbiotic reproductive manipulators are widely studied as sources of postzygotic isolation in arthropods, but their effect on prezygotic isolation between genetically differentiated popul...

Creating outbred and inbred populations in haplodiploids to measure adaptive responses in the laboratory

Archive ouverte | Godinho, Diogo, P. | CCSD

International audience. Laboratory studies are often criticized for not being representative of processes occurring in natural populations. One reason for this is the fact that laboratory populations generally do no...

Chargement des enrichissements...