The cuticle of insects is covered by a layer of hydrocarbons (CHC), whose original function is the protection from desiccation and pathogens. However, in most insects CHC profiles are species specific. While this variability among species was largely linked to communication and recognition functions, additional selective forces may shape insect CHC profiles. Here, we show that in Philanthinae digger wasps (Crabronidae) the CHC profile coevolved with a peculiar brood-care strategy. In particular, we found that the behavior to embalm prey stored in the nest with hydrocarbons is adaptive to protect larval food from fungi in those species hunting for Hymenoptera. The prey embalming secretion is identical in composition to the alkene-dominated CHC profile in these species, suggesting that their profile is adaptively conserved for this purpose. In contrast, prey embalming is not required in those species that switched to Coleoptera as prey. Released from this chemical brood-care strategy, Coleoptera-hunting species considerably diversified their CHC profiles. Differential needs to successfully protect prey types used as larval food have thus driven the diversification of CHCs profiles of female Philanthinae wasps. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first evidence of a direct link between selection pressure for food preservation and CHC diversity.

Release from prey preservation behavior via prey switch allowed diversification of cuticular hydrocarbon profiles in digger wasps / M. Wurdack, C. Polidori, A. Keller, H. Feldhaar, T. Schmitt. - In: EVOLUTION. - ISSN 0014-3820. - 71:11(2017), pp. 2562-2571. [10.1111/evo.13322]

Release from prey preservation behavior via prey switch allowed diversification of cuticular hydrocarbon profiles in digger wasps

C. Polidori;
2017

Abstract

The cuticle of insects is covered by a layer of hydrocarbons (CHC), whose original function is the protection from desiccation and pathogens. However, in most insects CHC profiles are species specific. While this variability among species was largely linked to communication and recognition functions, additional selective forces may shape insect CHC profiles. Here, we show that in Philanthinae digger wasps (Crabronidae) the CHC profile coevolved with a peculiar brood-care strategy. In particular, we found that the behavior to embalm prey stored in the nest with hydrocarbons is adaptive to protect larval food from fungi in those species hunting for Hymenoptera. The prey embalming secretion is identical in composition to the alkene-dominated CHC profile in these species, suggesting that their profile is adaptively conserved for this purpose. In contrast, prey embalming is not required in those species that switched to Coleoptera as prey. Released from this chemical brood-care strategy, Coleoptera-hunting species considerably diversified their CHC profiles. Differential needs to successfully protect prey types used as larval food have thus driven the diversification of CHCs profiles of female Philanthinae wasps. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first evidence of a direct link between selection pressure for food preservation and CHC diversity.
English
Cuticular hydrocarbons; digger wasp; Philanthinae; prey preservation; prey specialization
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
2017
Wiley
71
11
2562
2571
10
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
NON aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Release from prey preservation behavior via prey switch allowed diversification of cuticular hydrocarbon profiles in digger wasps / M. Wurdack, C. Polidori, A. Keller, H. Feldhaar, T. Schmitt. - In: EVOLUTION. - ISSN 0014-3820. - 71:11(2017), pp. 2562-2571. [10.1111/evo.13322]
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
5
262
Article (author)
no
M. Wurdack, C. Polidori, A. Keller, H. Feldhaar, T. Schmitt
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/801116
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