| Literature DB >> 30129423 |
Gavin C Woodruff1,2, Patrick C Phillips3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Biotic interactions are ubiquitous and require information from ecology, evolutionary biology, and functional genetics in order to be understood. However, study systems that are amenable to investigations across such disparate fields are rare. Figs and fig wasps are a classic system for ecology and evolutionary biology with poor functional genetics; Caenorhabditis elegans is a classic system for functional genetics with poor ecology. In order to help bridge these disciplines, here we describe the natural history of a close relative of C. elegans, Caenorhabditis inopinata, that is associated with the fig Ficus septica and its pollinating Ceratosolen wasps.Entities:
Keywords: Caenorhabditis; Coevolution; Ficus; Fig wasp; Natural history
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30129423 PMCID: PMC6102938 DOI: 10.1186/s12898-018-0182-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ecol ISSN: 1472-6785 Impact factor: 2.964
Fig. 1Caenorhabditis inopinata is associated with fresh Ficus septica figs and fig wasps. a A cladogram revealing the evolutionarily relationships of Caenorhabditis, following [46, 47]. The fig-associated C. inopinata is among the closest known relatives of the important model organism, C. elegans. This reduced figure excludes many known species in this group [53]. b An adult C. inopinata female isolated from a fresh F. septica fig. c An adult C. inopinata male isolated from a fresh F. septica fig. d A C. inopinata dauer larva isolated from a fresh F. septica fig. All scale bars in (b–d) are 100 microns. e A female Ceratosolen pollinating wasp. f A Philotrypesis parasitic wasp. g A F. septica plant
Fig. 2Ficus septica fig collection sites in 2016. a, b Figs were collected in four of the Sakishima Islands (a, boxed region) of Okinawa Prefecture, Japan: Yonaguni (c), Iriomote (d), Miyako (e), and Ishigaki (f). Blue circles represent positions of F. septica plants where Caenorhabditis inopinata nematodes were found, and red circles denote positions of F. septica plants where C. inopinata nematodes were not found in dissected figs
Caenorhabditis inopinata occupancy in Ficus septica figs in 2016: all sampled plants
| Island | All plantsa | Plants with | Plants without | All Figsd | Figs with | Figs without |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iriomote | 27 | 19 (0.70) | 8 (0.30) | 86 | 49 (0.57) | 37 (0.43) |
| Ishigaki | 24 | 6 (0.25) | 18 (0.75) | 36 | 7 (0.19) | 29 (0.81) |
| Miyako | 10 | 6 (0.60) | 4 (0.40) | 79 | 17 (0.22) | 62 (0.78) |
| Yonaguni | 23 | 10 (0.43) | 13 (0.57) | 49 | 22 (0.45) | 27 (0.55) |
| Total | 84 | 41 (0.49) | 43 (0.51) | 250 | 95 (0.38) | 155 (0.62) |
aThe number of F. septica plants from which figs were picked and dissected. This includes all such plants, regardless of nematode occupancy or pollination status
bThe number of F. septica plants from which at least one dissected fig harbored C. inopinata. Fraction of all plants (denominator in Column 2) in parentheses
cThe number of F. septica plants from which no dissected figs harbored C. inopinata. Fraction of all plants (denominator in Column 2) in parentheses
dThe number of dissected F. septica figs, regardless of nematode occupancy or pollination status
eThe number of dissected F. septica figs harboring C. inopinata, regardless of pollination status. Fraction of all figs (denominator in Column 5) in parentheses
fThe number of dissected F. septica figs that did not contain C. inopinata, regardless of pollination status. Fraction of all figs (denominator in Column 5) in parentheses
Caenorhabditis inopinata occupancy and pollination status among Ficus septica figs in 2016: plants without C. inopinata
| Island | Plantsa | Figsb | Pollinated figsc | Unpollinated figsd | Figs with | Figs without |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iriomote | 8 | 8 | 7 (0.87) | 1 (0.13) | 0 | 8 |
| Ishigaki | 18 | 20 | 19 (0.95) | 1 (0.05) | 0 | 20 |
| Miyako | 4 | 22 | 4 (0.18) | 18 (0.82) | 0 | 22 |
| Yonaguni | 13 | 16 | 16 (1) | 0 (0) | 0 | 16 |
| Total | 43 | 66 | 46 (0.70) | 20 (0.30) | 0 | 66 |
aThe number of F. septica plants from which figs were picked and dissected yet none harbored C. inopinata. This includes all such plants, regardless of fig pollination status
bThe number of dissected F. septica figs from plants that did not harbor C. inopinata, regardless of pollination status
cThe number of dissected, pollinated F. septica figs from plants that did not harbor Caenorhabditis inopinata. Fraction of all figs from plants that did not harbor C. inopinata (denominator in Column 3) in parentheses
dThe number of dissected, unpollinated F. septica figs from plants that did not harbor Caenorhabditis inopinata. Fraction of all figs from plants that did not harbor C. inopinata (denominator in Column 3) in parentheses
eThe number of dissected F. septica figs harboring C. inopinata from plants that did not harbor C. inopinata
fThe number of dissected F. septica figs not harboring C. inopinata from plants that did not harbor Caenorhabditis inopinata
Caenorhabditis inopinata occupancy and pollination status among Ficus septica figs in 2016: plants with C. inopinata
| Island | Plantsa | Figsb | Pollinated figsc | Unpollinated figsd | Figs with | Figs without | Pollinated figs with | Unpollinated figs with |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iriomote | 19 | 78 | 78 (1) | 0 (0) | 49 (0.63) | 29 (0.37) | 49 (0.63) | 0 |
| Ishigaki | 6 | 16 | 16 (1) | 0 (0) | 7 (0.44) | 9 (0.56) | 7 (0.44) | 0 |
| Miyako | 6 | 57 | 55 (0.96) | 2 (0.04) | 17 (0.30) | 40 (0.70) | 17 (0.31) | 0 |
| Yonaguni | 10 | 33 | 33 (1) | 0 (0) | 22 (0.67) | 11 (0.33) | 22 (0.67) | 0 |
| Total | 41 | 184 | 182 (0.99) | 2 (0.01) | 95 (0.52) | 89 (0.48) | 95 (0.52) | 0 |
aThe number of F. septica plants from which at least one fig was picked, dissected, and did harbor C. inopinata. This includes all such plants, regardless of fig pollination status
bThe number of dissected F. septica figs from plants that did harbor C. inopinata, regardless of pollination status
cThe number of dissected, pollinated F. septica figs from plants that did harbor C. inopinata. Fraction of all figs from plants that harbored C. inopinata (denominator in Column 3) in parentheses
dThe number of dissected, unpollinated F. septica figs from plants that did harbor C. inopinata. Fraction of all figs from plants that harbored C. inopinata (denominator in Column 3) in parentheses
eThe number of dissected F. septica figs harboring C. inopinata from plants that did harbor C. inopinata, regardless of pollination status. Fraction of all figs from plants that harbored C. inopinata (denominator in Column 3) in parentheses
fThe number of dissected F. septica figs not harboring C. inopinata from plants that did harbor C. inopinata, regardless of pollination status. Fraction of all figs from plants that harbored C. inopinata (denominator in Column 3) in parentheses
gThe number of dissected, pollinated F. septica figs harboring C. inopinata from plants that harbored C. inopinata. Fraction of pollinated figs from plants that harbored C. inopinata (denominator in Column 4) in parentheses
hThe number of dissected, unpollinated F. septica figs not harboring C. inopinata from plants that did harbor C. inopinata
Fig. 4Caenorhabditis inopinata proliferates in early phase figs and disperses in late phase figs. a–e Dissected figs were binned into five developmental stages based on wasp presence and developmental progression: a not pollinated (Phase A), b pollinated with no apparent developing wasps (Phase B, arrow noting foundress pollinating wasp), c developing wasp progeny apparent (Phase C), d wasp progeny emerging (Phase D, arrow noting emerging wasp progeny), and e post-wasp emergence (Phase E). The presence of abundant (≥ 20 individuals) or rare (< 20 individuals) reproductive stage (not dauer larvae) or C. inopinata dauer larvae were noted in each dissected fig (see methods). f Frequency of observed C. inopinata developmental stage by fig developmental stage. Reproductive C. inopinata (i.e., developmental stages that are not dauer larvae) predominates in Phase B and Phase C figs, whereas C. inopinata dauer larvae dominate in Phase D and Phase E figs. C. inopinata was not observed in figs that were not pollinated. The number of figs dissected per stage is noted at the top of each bar. Reproductive stage and dauer C. inopinata frequencies were different between fig stages (G-test of independence p-values < 0.001 for both adult and dispersal types). Nematodes from the fig interior were used for all of these observations. Fisher’s exact test p-values for all pairwise comparisons can be found in Additional file 4: Tables S7, S8
Fig. 5Caenorhabditis inopinata is found traveling on pollinating fig wasps but not parasitic wasps. Left, a dispersal C. inopinata nematode has dismounted from a pollinating Ceratosolen female fig wasp that has been placed on a petri dish. The scale bar represents 10 microns. Right, a table describing wasp carrier data. Fig trees tend to fruit synchronously within a plant but asynchronously between plants [19]. In 2016, two Ficus septica plants were observed to harbor figs with actively emerging fig wasps. Emerged fig wasps were caught in a plastic bag, killed, and placed onto agar plates. Plates were subsequently monitored for dismounting C. inopinata 3 h and 2 days later. Here, numbers represent the number of plated wasps with disembarking C. sp. animals. C. inopinata animals were never seen dismounting from parasitic wasps despite their habitat sharing with pollinating wasps harboring C. inopinata. “L4,” C. inopinata animals at the fourth larval stage of development
Fig. 3Caenorhabditis inopinata is more likely to be found in figs with multiple foundresses. Graphed are the percentages of dissected F. septica figs harboring C. inopinata by Ceratosolen pollinating foundress wasp number. “0*” includes figs that were pollinated but no foundress wasps were seen, whereas “0” notes figs that were not pollinated. Numbers above the x-axis represent fig sample sizes
Fig. 6Few Caenorhabditis inopinata nematodes dismount from Ceratosolen pollinating wasps. In the wasp plating experiment described in Fig. 5, the number of C. inopinata animals per wasp were also counted. This histogram reveals that of the pollinating wasps that carried C. inopinata (11/29), most carried only one to a few individuals
Caenorhabditis has not been observed in Ficus species other than Ficus septica
| Figs dissecteda | Figs with | Pollinated figsc | Plants sampledd | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | ||||
| | 10 | 0 | – | 1 |
| | 15 | 0 | 15 | 1 |
| | 15 | 0 | 3 | 1 |
| 2016 | ||||
| | 10 | 0 | 7 | 2 |
| | 25 | 0 | 25 | 2 |
| | 36 | 0 | 36 | 2 |
Caenorhabditis inopinata has not yet been observed in Ficus species other than Ficus septica. Non-F. septica figs were dissected in May 2015 and May 2016. There have been eight species of Ficus aside from F. septica reported on these islands [52]. Caenorhabditis inopinata was not observed in five of these (F. caulocarpa, F. ampelas, F. benguetensis, and F. virgata figs were not found). “–” = not recorded
aThe number of dissected figs, regardless of nematode occupancy or pollination status
bThe number of dissected figs harboring Caenorhabditis inopinata, regardless of pollination status
cThe number of dissected figs that were also pollinated
dThe number of Ficus plants from which figs were picked and dissected. This includes all such plants, regardless of nematode occupancy or pollination status
Fig. 7Ambient and interior live F. septica fig temperatures. Live F. septica figs interiors were measured on eight plants within 1.5 h in the midday. Open red circles represent exterior temperatures, whereas solid blue circles denote interior fig temperatures. Fig interiors were on average 2.4 °C cooler than exterior temperatures (t-test p-value < 0.001)