Abstract

The West Indian fruit fly, Anastrepha obliqua (Macquart), is the second most important tephritid fruit fly in Mexico, infesting mango, hog plum and guava fruits. To control this pest, the Mexican government has implemented the use of the sterile insect technique (SIT), which involves the mass production, sterilization and release of flies. However, the A. obliqua laboratory males used in SIT are selected to a lesser extent by the wild females during competitiveness tests. The objective of this study was to compare the effects of males fed on fruit fly food enriched with Providencia rettgeri to those in males fed on food alone, assessing male mating competitiveness, capture of females using traps baited with males fed with the enriched diet and sex pheromone components. The results indicated that males fed with the diet enriched with P. rettgeri had increased mating competitiveness and captured more females in the field cage tests. However, no difference was observed in the proportion of volatile sex pheromone components identified during the calling of A. obliqua males. The results suggest the value of incorporating bacteria into the mass rearing technique of A. obliqua adults in order to improve the sexual competitiveness of males from the laboratory compared to wild males.

Highlights

  • An important aspect of insect biology that allows these organisms to increase their diversity and abundance is the symbiotic relationships they share with microorganisms that impact directly on their life history traits

  • We found that the number of mating A. obliqua males that were fed with Mb R food enriched with P. rettgeri increased significantly (χ2 = 367.36; df = 1; P < 0.001) compared to those fed on the Mb R food alone (Figure 1)

  • This study produced three important findings: The first indicated that A. obliqua males from the mass-rearing colony fed on the Mb R food enriched with P. rettgeri under field cage conditions presented increased mating compared to the males fed on the Mb R food alone

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Summary

Introduction

An important aspect of insect biology that allows these organisms to increase their diversity and abundance is the symbiotic relationships they share with microorganisms that impact directly on their life history traits. Many of these microorganisms may be commensalist or parasitic (Poveda-Arias, 2019), others play an important role in the nutrition, metabolism and immune protection of their hosts (Dillon and Dillon, 2004; Brune, 2010; Koch and Schmid-Hempel, 2011; Engel and Moran, 2013). The pathogenicity of P. rettgeri in Mediterranean fruit fly, Ceratitis capitata (Wied.) depends on the concentration supplied (Msaad-Guerfali et al, 2018), and previous experiments indicate that A. obliqua males can increase their sexual competitiveness under laboratory conditions when fed on P. rettgeri (Gómez-Alonso, 2013)

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