| Literature DB >> 28466236 |
Wayne G Rostant1,2, Jemima Bowyer1, Jack Coupland1, James Facey3, David J Hosken1, Nina Wedell4.
Abstract
Understanding the evolution and spread of insecticide resistance requires knowing the relative fitness of resistant organisms. In the absence of insecticides, resistance is predicted to be costly. The Drosophila melanogaster DDT resistance allele (DDT-R) is associated with a male mating cost. This could be because resistant males are generally smaller, but DDT-R may also alter courtship behaviours. Here we tested for body size and courtship effects of DDT-R on mating success in competitive and non-competitive mating trials respectively. We also assessed relative aggression in resistant and susceptible males because aggression can also influence mating success. While the effect of DDT-R on male size partly contributed to reduced mating success, resistant males also had lower rates of courtship and were less aggressive than susceptible males. These differences contribute to the observed DDT-R mating costs. Additionally, these pleiotropic effects of DDT-R are consistent with the history and spread of resistance alleles in nature.Entities:
Keywords: Aggression; Body size; Courtship; Insecticide resistance; Mating success; Pleiotropy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28466236 PMCID: PMC5486851 DOI: 10.1007/s10519-017-9850-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Genet ISSN: 0001-8244 Impact factor: 2.805
Fig. 1The effect of relative size on whether a susceptible or resistant male wins in competitive trials. a Logistic plot: the curve represents the fit of the logistic model of susceptible male win probability as a function of the susceptible/resistant wing size ratio (SS/RR). Points show empirical probabilities (+/− s.e.) of a susceptible male win. Rugs at the top and bottom of the graph show the empirical distribution of binary win data. (b) Probability of susceptible male win, with 95% binomial confidence intervals, when competitive trial data is divided into three post-hoc categories. Asterisks represent significant departure from expectation of 50% (Exact binomial test) indicated by dotted line: *** p < 0.001
Summary of courtship behavioural responses to possession of DDT-R allele. ↑ represents increase in resistant males relative to susceptible males
| Behavioural response | Measure | Effect (RR male relative to SS) | Test summary |
|---|---|---|---|
| Copulation latency | Absolute (seconds) | ↑ | GLM, gamma, |
| Courtship latency | Absolute (seconds) | – | GLM, quasipoisson, |
| Courtship duration | Absolute (seconds) | ↑ | GLM, quasipoisson, |
| Decamping | Proportion of time | – | GLM, quasibinomial, |
| Relative frequency | ↑ | GLM, quasibinomial, | |
| Wing vibration | Proportion of time | – | GLM, Gaussian, |
| Relative frequency | – | GLM, binomial, χ 2
1= 0.47196 | |
| Rate (min−1) | ↓ | GLM, gamma, | |
| Chasing | Proportion of time | – | GLM, quasibinomial, |
| Relative frequency | – | GLM, Gaussian, | |
| Rate (min−1) | ↓ | GLM, Gaussian, | |
| Attempted copulation | Absolute (count) | – | GLM, quasipoisson, |
| Relative frequency (logit-transformed) | – | GLM, Gaussian, | |
| Rate (min−1) | ↓ | GLM, gamma, | |
| Genital licking | Proportion of time | – | GLM, quasibinomial, |
| Relative frequency | – | GLM, binomial, χ2
1= 0.0002 | |
| Rate (min−1) | – | Wilcoxon rank-sum test, |
↓ Represents decrease in resistant males relative to susceptible males
Dash indicates no difference between resistant and susceptible males
GLM error family (with any transformations of response variable), test statistic and p values given, except in the case of genital licking rate for which a nonparametric test was required
Adjusted p values (p ) are Benjamini–Hochberg corrected for multiple testing
Fig. 2Effect of male resistance genotype on a total copulation latency, and b the proportion of behavioural events that are decamping events. Asterisks represent significance of main effect of male genotype in GLM: ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001
Fig. 3Effect of male resistance genotype on rates (min−1) of three common courtship behaviours a wing vibration, b chase, and c attempted copulation. Asterisks represent significance of main effect of male genotype in GLM: * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001
Fig. 4Counts of all aggressive behaviours observed in pairs of resistant and susceptible males. Asterisk represents significance of main effect of male genotype in GLMM: *** p < 0.001