Abstract

When males fight for access to females, such conflict rarely escalates into lethal fight because the risks and costs involved, that is, severe injury or death, are too high. The social spider mite, Stigmaeopsis miscanthi, does exhibit lethal male fights, and this male–male aggressiveness varies among populations. To understand the evolution of lethal fighting, we investigated aggressiveness in 42 populations and phylogenetic relationships in 47 populations along the Japanese archipelago. By analysis of the male weapon morph, a proxy for aggressiveness, we confirmed the existence of a mildly aggressive (ML) form, besides the low aggression (LW) and high aggression (HG) forms reported earlier. To evaluate demographic history of these three forms, we employed the approximate Bayesian computation approach using mtCOI sequences and taking into consideration the postlast glacial expansion history of the host plant, Miscanthus sinensis. As results, hierarchical split models are more likely to explain the observed genetic pattern than admixture models, and the ML form in the subtropical region was considered the ancestral group. The inferred demographic history was consistent with the one reconstructed for the host plant in a previous study. The LW form was split from the ML form during the last glacial period (20,000–40,000 years BP), and subsequently, the HG form was split from the ML form at the end of or after the last glacial period (5,494–10,988 years BP). The results also suggest that the mite invaded Japan more than once, resulting in the present parapatric distribution of LW and HG forms in eastern Japan.

Highlights

  • In the animal kingdom, males often fight with conspecific rival males for access to females (Andersson, 1994)

  • The low aggression (LW) form was split from the mildly aggressive (ML) form during the last glacial period (20,000–40,000 years BP), and subsequently, the high aggression (HG) form was split from the ML form at the end of or after the last glacial period (5,494–10,988 years BP)

  • To address the evolutionary process of lethal male fight in the social spider mite, S. miscanthi, we investigated male–male aggressiveness in 42 populations and phylogenetic relationships in 47 populations distributed along two land bridges between the Japanese archipel‐ ago and the eastern Eurasian continent during the last glacial period

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Males often fight with conspecific rival males for access to females (Andersson, 1994). In several species, males do fight to the death (Crespi, 1988; Hamilton, 1979; Saitō, 1990; Zenner, O'Callaghan, & Griffin, 2014) Why and how such lethal male fight evolves may be explained by several adaptive mechanisms, for example, extremely high benefit that each mating event contributes to lifetime reproduction of the males (Enquist & Leimar, 1990), low encounter rate with male competitors (Innocent, West, Sanderson, Hyrkkanen, & Reece, 2011; Murray, 1987, 1989), and difference in genetic relatedness among males (Hamilton, 1979; Kapranas, Maher, & Griffin, 2016; Reinhold, 2003; Saito, 1995; Sato, Egas, Sabelis, & Mochizuki, 2013). Using male weapon morph as proxy, we investigate whether the mite pop‐ ulations can be categorized into three distinct forms: low, high, and mild aggression forms (Sato, Sabelis, & Mochizuki, 2013; Sato, Saito, & Chittenden, 2008; Sato, Saito, & Mori, 2000a, 2000b). We test the hypothe‐ sis of migration history of the mite by inferring the past demographic history of the three forms using the ABC approach

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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