Abstract

In hymenopterans, males are normally haploid (1n) and females diploid (2n), but individuals with divergent ploidy levels are frequently found. In species with ‘complementary sex determination’ (CSD), increasing numbers of diploid males that are often infertile or unviable arise from inbreeding, presenting a major impediment to biocontrol breeding. Non‐CSD species, which are common in some parasitoid wasp taxa, do not produce polyploids through inbreeding. Nevertheless, polyploidy also occurs in non‐CSD Hymenoptera. As a first survey on the impacts of inbreeding and polyploidy of non‐CSD species, we investigate life‐history traits of a long‐term laboratory line of the parasitoid Nasonia vitripennis (Walker) (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae) (‘Whiting polyploid line’) in which polyploids of both sexes (diploid males, triploid females) are viable and fertile. Diploid males produce diploid sperm and virgin triploid females produce haploid and diploid eggs. We found that diploid males did not differ from haploid males with respect to body size, progeny size, mate competition, or lifespan. When diploid males were mated to many females (without accounting for mating order), the females produced a relatively high proportion of male offspring, possibly indicating that these males produce less sperm and/or have reduced sperm functionality. In triploid females, parasitization rate and fecundity were reduced and body size was slightly increased, but there was no effect on lifespan. After one generation of outbreeding, lifespan as well as parasitization rate were increased, and a body size difference was no longer apparent. This suggests that outbreeding has an effect on traits observed in an inbred polyploidy background. Overall, these results indicate some phenotypic detriments of non‐CSD polyploids that must be taken into account in breeding.

Highlights

  • Polyploidy is the heritable condition of having more than the typical number of chromosome sets

  • The consequences of inbreeding and polyploidy are well known in complimentary sex determination’ (CSD)-species because of the sterile diploid male vortex, but polyploid phenotypes in non-CSD species have not been studied

  • These results can be interpreted for their effects on the performance of N. vitripennis as a biocontrol agent, as it is used for muscid pest control in livestock rearing (Kaufman et al, 2001a,b; Skovgard & Nachman, 2017), albeit uncommonly

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Polyploidy is the heritable condition of having more than the typical number of chromosome sets. It is rare in the animal kingdom but relatively frequent in insects. All hymenopterans have haplodiploid sex Polyploids, in particular diploid males, have been recorded for more than 80 species across the hymenopteran tree (van Wilgenburg et al, 2006; Heimpel & de Boer, 2008; Harpur et al, 2013). In many of these cases, the occurrence of polyploidy is linked to the CSD

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call