| Literature DB >> 28331632 |
Ko Katoh1, Masazumi Iwasaki2, Shouhei Hosono1,3, Atsushi Yoritsune2, Masanori Ochiai4, Makoto Mizunami5, Hiroshi Nishino2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Facultative parthenogenesis, seen in many animal phyla, is a reproductive strategy in which females are able to generate offspring when mating partners are unavailable. In some subsocial and eusocial insects, parthenogenesis is often more prevalent than sexual reproduction. However, little is known about how social cooperation is linked to the promotion of parthenogenesis. The domiciliary cockroach Periplaneta americana is well-suited to addressing this issue as this species belongs to the superfamily Blattoidea, which diverged into eusocial termites and shows facultative parthenogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: Antenna; Chemosensory signal; Cockroaches; Parthenogenesis, group effect; Periplanone; Sex pheromone; Sexual reproduction
Year: 2017 PMID: 28331632 PMCID: PMC5348754 DOI: 10.1186/s40851-017-0063-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zoological Lett ISSN: 2056-306X Impact factor: 2.836
Fig. 1Timing of the first and second ootheca productions in 11 experimental groups (G1-G11). a Photograph of two female cockroaches housed in a circular plastic container for the behavioral assay. b-l Scatter plots showing intervals between the imaginal molt and the first ootheca production (red) and the second ootheca production (blue) of individual females in different experimental groups. Each dot represents the interval of identified individuals. Red and blue lines indicate the mean period for the first and the second ootheca productions and pale red and blue bands indicate the width of the standard deviation for the first and the second ootheca productions
Intervals to the first and second ootheca productions from the imaginal molt in experimental groups
| Group | Reproduction mode | 1st ootheca production (mean ± SD) | CV | 2nd ootheca production (mean ± SD) | CV | Number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| One female with one male | sexual | 10.5 (±2.5) | 0.24 | 14.7 (±4.3) | 0.29 | 17 |
| One female | asexual | 13.2 (±4.7) | 0.36 | 27.0 (±12.9) | 0.48 | 44 |
| Two females | asexual | 11.9 (±5.2) | 0.44 | 22.0 (±7.5) | 0.34 | 42 |
| Three females | asexual | 10.4 (±2.9) | 0.28 | 18.2 (±4.0) | 0.22 | 51 |
| Five females | asexual | 11.1 (±2.9) | 0.26 | 18.1 (±3.5) | 0.19 | 75 |
| One female with one genitalia ablated male | asexual | 13.0 (±5.8) | 0.44 | 26.3 (±9.1) | 0.35 | 20 |
| One female with two genitalia ablated males | asexual | 12.6 (±3.6) | 0.28 | 26.6 (±4.9) | 0.18 | 19 |
| Three palpectomized females | asexual | 10.9 (±2.0) | 0.19 | 19.6 (±4.3) | 0.22 | 51 |
| Three antennectomized females | asexual | 11.9 (±2.0) | 0.17 | 20.8 (±3.5) | 0.17 | 48 |
| Three antennae and palpectomised females | asexual | 12.8 (±2.0) | 0.15 | 22.4 (±4.7) | 0.21 | 42 |
| One female with periplanone-B | asexual | 12.6 (±3.1) | 0.25 | 24.1 (±7.4) | 0.31 | 41 |
CV coefficient of variation
Viability of sexually and asexually produced oothecae
| Total oothecae | Hatched oothecae | Hatchability (%)a | lengths of hatched ootheca (mm)b | Lengths of unhatched ootheca (mm)c | Mean no. of nymphs per ootheca (±SD)d | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mated | 30 | 14 | 46.7 | 8.2 ± 0.8 | 8.4 ± 0.6 | 14.3(±1.5) |
| Unmated | 33 | 10 | 30.3 | 8.7 ± 0.7 | 8.7 ± 0.5 | 9.1 (±3.3)* |
Oothecae produced by unmated females were collected from a colony of twenty virgin females. Oothecae were incubated at 28 °C in a 12:12 h light-dark cycle. Welch’s t-test P = 0.18 (>0.05)a, 0.098 (>0.05)b, 0.156 (>0.05)c, 0.00004 (<0.0001)d. Asterisk indicates the presence of statistical significance
Fig. 2Statistical evaluation of different experimental groups. a, b Bar graphs of mean intervals between the imaginal molt and the first ootheca production (a, red) and the second ootheca production (b, blue) in experimental groups (see Fig. 1 for full spellings of the abbreviated terms for experimental groups). Error bar represents the standard deviation (SD) of the mean. ANOVA (a): F10, 439 = 3.744, P = 7.6 × 10−5. ANOVA (b): F10, 439 = 11.291, P = 2.9 × 10−17. Means not sharing the same letter are significantly different (Games-Howell, P < 0.05)
Fig. 3Photograph of offspring collected from a colony maintained by parthenogenesis. The offspring, anesthetized briefly by carbon dioxide, are all females and had reached the fifth generation since a colony had been founded by 15 virgin females more than three year ago. No malformed adults or nymphs were detected