Abstract

Maternal effects on environmentally induced alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs) are poorly understood but likely to be selected for if mothers can reliably predict offspring environments. We assessed maternal effects in two populations (Y and G) of herbivorous arrhenotokous spider mites Tetranychus urticae, where males conditionally express fighting and sneaking tactics in male–male combat and pre-copulatory guarding behaviour. We hypothesized that resident mothers should adjust their reproduction and sons’ ARTs to immigrating alien conspecifics in dependence of alien conspecifics posing a fitness threat or advantage. To induce maternal effects, females were exposed to own or alien socio-environments and mated to own or alien males. Across maternal and sons' reproductive traits, the maternal socio-environment induced stronger effects than the maternal mate, and G-mothers responded more strongly to Y-influence than vice versa. G-socio-environments and Y-mates enhanced maternal egg production in both populations. Maternal exposure to G-socio-environments demoted, yet maternal Y-mates promoted, guarding occurrence and timing by sons. Sneakers guarded earlier than fighters in Y-environments, whereas the opposite happened in G-environments. The endosymbiont Cardinium, present in G, did not exert any classical effect but may have played a role via the shared plant. Our study highlights interpopulation variation in immediate and anticipatory maternal responses to immigrants.

Highlights

  • Maternal effects on environmentally induced alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs) are poorly understood but likely to be selected for if mothers can reliably predict offspring environments

  • Screening for infection by the endosymbiotic bacteria Wolbachia, Rickettsia, Spiroplasma and Cardinium revealed that the G-females mated to own (G-)population was infected by Cardinium, whereas the Y-mothers experiencing an own (Y-)population was free of endosymbiont infection

  • Considering that P. vulgaris is poorly directly defended against herbivores, that G-individuals did worse in Y-environments, we argue that feeding by Cardinium-infected G-individuals rendered the bean leaves nutritionally more favourable than feeding by endosymbiont-free Y-individuals

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Summary

Introduction

Maternal effects on environmentally induced alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs) are poorly understood but likely to be selected for if mothers can reliably predict offspring environments. We assessed maternal effects in two populations (Y and G) of herbivorous arrhenotokous spider mites Tetranychus urticae, where males conditionally express fighting and sneaking tactics in male–male combat and precopulatory guarding behaviour. We assessed maternal effects induced by interpopulation interactions on the expression of conditional ARTs in two-spotted spider mites Tetranychus urticae Koch. Fighters and sneakers differ in behaviour/physiology, but not body size and morphology, and are conditionally reversible phenotypes [19] Both male phenotypes actively search for potential mates and are mainly attracted by pheromones emitted by premature females in their final quiescent phase, called teleiochrysalis (hereafter called T-females) [21,22].

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