Abstract

The satyr of Greek mythology was half‐man, half‐goat, with an animal persona signifying immoderate sexual appetites. In biology, satyrization is the disruption of reproduction in matings between closely related species. Interestingly, its effects are often reciprocally asymmetric, manifesting more strongly in one direction of heterospecific mating than the other. Heterospecific matings are well known to result in female fitness costs due to the production of sterile or inviable hybrid offspring and can also occur due to reduced female sexual receptivity, lowering the likelihood of any subsequent conspecific matings. Here we investigated the costs and mechanisms of satyrization in the Drosophila melanogaster species subgroup of fruitflies. The results showed that D. simulans females experienced higher fitness costs from a loss of remating opportunities due to significantly reduced post‐mating sexual receptivity than did D. melanogaster females, as a result of reciprocal heterospecific matings. Reciprocal tests of the effects of male reproductive accessory gland protein (Acp) injections on female receptivity in pairwise comparisons between D. melanogaster and five other species within the melanogaster species subgroup revealed significant post‐mating receptivity asymmetries. This was due to variation in the effects of heterospecific Acps within species with which D. melanogaster can mate, and significant but nonasymmetric Acp effects in species with which it cannot. We conclude that asymmetric satyrization due to post‐mating effects of Acps may be common among diverging and hybridising species. The findings are of interest in understanding the evolution of reproductive isolation and species divergence.

Highlights

  • Reproductive interference occurs when the courtship and copulation of one species is interrupted or disturbed by another (Gröning & Hochkirch, 2008)

  • D. melanogaster females were resistant to most injections of conspecific and heterospecific accessory gland protein (Acp) with no significant differences between Acp and saline injections in any of the injection experiments except for

  • Our results show significant costs of satyrization for D. simulans females that mated with D. melanogaster males, which were not observed in the reciprocal cross

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Summary

Introduction

Reproductive interference occurs when the courtship and copulation of one species is interrupted or disturbed by another (Gröning & Hochkirch, 2008) It has been observed across many taxa (de Bruyn et al, 2008; Landolt & Heath, 1987; Seehausen et al, 1997; Shuker & Burdfield-Steel, 2017) and can take many forms, including signal blocking, heterospecific rivalry and heterospecific mating (Gröning & Hochkirch, 2008). |2 competition between species that hybrid mate, with greater asymmetry increasing the probability of competitive exclusion (Kishi & Nakazawa, 2013) This is an important consequence of heterospecific mating and is of interest in understanding reinforcement and species divergence (Matute, 2010) as well as in practical applications of satyrization as a method of insect control (Kishi & Nakazawa, 2013). Fitness effects primarily arise as opportunity for remating, energetic or mating trauma costs (Yassin & David, 2016)

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