| Literature DB >> 23087811 |
Kenta Watanabe1, Yudai Nishide, Derek A Roff, Jin Yoshimura, Kikuo Iwabuchi.
Abstract
A larval army caste is found in some parasitic wasps with polyembryonic or clonal proliferation, where many clone larvae emerge from a single egg. In contrast to non-parasitic eusocial Hymenoptera, sterile soldier larvae that protect their clonal reproductives are found in both females and males. Recently, the proportion of soldier larvae has been found to vary radically, depending on the internal conditions of the host, such as multiparasitism by other larval parasites. However, the proportion of male soldier larvae is constant, irrespective of the host internal environment. It is unknown if these traits are heritable. Here we show that a high heritability is found in both sexes, while, in the 6th instar hosts, substantially lower heritability is found in females. These results imply that the structure of the larval caste is determined genetically by both female and male embryonic cells, but more likely modified environmentally in females.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23087811 PMCID: PMC3476458 DOI: 10.1038/srep00729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Variations in soldier caste among populations and families.
Schematic diagram of mating systems to produce female and male families (a), and a family consisting of both a male and a female brood (b). The examples of chromosome sets indicating recombination are shown under the adults and solder larvae. Mean number of soldiers among populations at the 3rd host instar (c) and at the 6th host instar (d), and among families within a population at the 3rd host instar (e) and at the 6th host instar (f). The statistical analyses are: (c) family numbers of populations were 6, 10, 12, 9, 2 and 2; one-way ANOVA, n = 233, F3,229 = 0.25, p = 0.86; (d) family numbers of populations, 6, 8, 10, 8, 2 and 2, F5,339 = 1.74, p = 0.12; (e) one-way ANOVA, n = 233, F31,201 = 7.23, p = 10−16; (f) one-way ANOVA, n = 307, F36,304 = 5.46, p = 10−16. Error bar indicates SD. Numbers in bars indicate the sample size (c and d). The populations from Onojo and Koshi cities are excluded from statistical analyses of families because of small sample size.
Figure 2Heritability (H) and CVG in the number of soldiers at the 3rd and 6th host instars.
The heritability (a) and coefficients of genetic variations (b) in males (blue triangle) and females (red circle) estimated from a full-sib analysis are shown with error bars indicating standard errors estimated with the jackknife procedure33. All estimated heritabilities are significantly different from zero. The heritability of females at the 6th host instar is significantly different from both that of females at the 3rd host instar and that of males at the 6th instar. See Supplementary Table S3 in Supplementary Information for detail data.
Figure 3Positive correlations in the male and female soldier numbers of a family.
(a) 3rd host instar (Pearson's product-moment correlation test, r = 0.92, No. of families = 6, p = 0.001). (b) 6th host instar (Pearson's product-moment correlation test, r = 0.87, No. of families = 8, p = 0.02). The population sizes of male soldiers are significantly correlated with those of females in the same family at the 3rd and 6th host instars. Each point indicates the mean numbers of soldiers (log-transformed) in each family and bars indicate SD.