Abstract
Polyembryonic parasitoids clonally produce sterile soldier larvae in both sexes. Female soldier larvae of Copidosoma floridanum defend their siblings and host resources against heterospecific competitors as well as conspecific male embryos that results in female biased sex ratios. However, the male soldiers of the USA strain exhibit no aggressive behaviors against them, suspected to be a secondary loss of male defense function in the course of evolution. From vitro and vivo experiments, we have found functional male soldiers in the Japanese strain of C. floridanum. In vitro experiments, male soldiers exhibit aggressions against four larval competitors, though aggressiveness is much weaker than that of female soldiers. In vivo experiments, heterospecific competitors are equivocally excluded in both male and female broods. Our findings support the idea that male soldiers have evolved primarily to defend against heterospecific competitors. Further experiments against conspecific embryos may be able to confirm this hypothesis.
Highlights
Polyembryonic parasitoids clonally produce sterile soldier larvae in both sexes
Female soldier larvae of Copidosoma floridanum defend their siblings and host resources against heterospecific competitors as well as conspecific male embryos that results in female biased sex ratios
In the Japanese strain of C. floridanum, in vitro contests revealed that the male soldiers exhibited aggressive behavior toward heterospecific parasitoid larvae, as in the female soldiers (Fig. 1)
Summary
Polyembryonic parasitoids clonally produce sterile soldier larvae in both sexes. Female soldier larvae of Copidosoma floridanum defend their siblings and host resources against heterospecific competitors as well as conspecific male embryos that results in female biased sex ratios. The production of female soldiers is explained by at least two functions (hypotheses): (1) the defense against heterospecific competitors, and (2) sex ratio adjustment in a mixed brood, where male embryos are attacked and killed by female soldiers to promote female biased sex ratios. Male and female eggs produce similar number of soldiers, in which soldier larvae of both sexes first appear at 1st or 2nd host instar and increase their number up to more than one hundred This sexual developmental difference between the USA and Japanese strains may reflect the differences of the functionality of male solders in these two strains. Evaluate the functionality of male soldiers in the Japanese strain by in vitro contests and in vivo assessments This finding should contribute to our questions on the evolution of male soldier castes: why they are very rare; why only found in polyembryonic wasps in hymenopteran insects
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