| Literature DB >> 34453172 |
Anna R Girardeau1, Brad R Foley2, Julia B Saltz1.
Abstract
Mixed-species groups describe active associations among individuals of 2 or more species at the same trophic level. Mixed-species groups are important to key ecological and evolutionary processes such as competition and predation, and research that ignores the presence of other species risks ignoring a key aspect of the environment in which social behavior is expressed and selected. Despite the defining emphasis of active formation for mixed-species groups, surprisingly little is known about the mechanisms by which mixed-species groups form. Furthermore, insects have been almost completely ignored in the study of mixed-species groups, despite their taxonomic importance and relative prominence in the study of single-species groups. Here, we measured group formation processes in Drosophila melanogaster and its sister species, Drosophila simulans. Each species was studied alone, and together, and one population of D. melanogaster was also studied both alone and with another, phenotypically distinct D. melanogaster population, in a nested-factorial design. This approach differs from typical methods of studying mixed-species groups in that we could quantitatively compare group formation between single-population, mixed-population, and mixed-species treatments. Surprisingly, we found no differences between treatments in the number, size, or composition of groups that formed, suggesting that single- and mixed-species groups form through similar mechanisms of active attraction. However, we found that mixed-species groups showed elevated interspecies male-male interactions, relative to interpopulation or intergenotype interactions in single-species groups. Our findings expand the conceptual and taxonomic study of mixed-species groups while raising new questions about the mechanisms of group formation broadly. © The American Genetic Association. 2021. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Drosophila melanogasterzzm321990 ; zzm321990 Drosophila simulanszzm321990 ; group formation; mixed-species group; social behavior
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34453172 DOI: 10.1093/jhered/esab041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hered ISSN: 0022-1503 Impact factor: 2.645