Abstract

Prokaryotic symbionts of aphids, which are important to the survival of the insect, are housed in specialized cells, mycetocytes. In a study of the aphids Acyrthosiphon pisum and Megoura viciae, the mycetocytes were found to exhibit a consistent pattern of variation in both size and number, both with developmental age of the insect and between alate and apterous morphs. The number of mycetocytes ranged between 70–90 and 60–70 in 1-day old larvae of Megoura viciae and Acyrthosiphon pisum, respectively, and tended to 0 in post-reproductive individuals of both species, with a decrease of 50% between birth and the time of the final moult (days 7–9) in alates and in the late-reproductive period (days 17–18) in apterae. The volume of mycetocytes of M. viciae increased with age from 1.17 × 10 −5 mm 3 in 1-day old larvae to 7.63 × 10 −5 mm 3 and 5.09 × 10 −5 mm 3 in apterous and alate teneral adults (day 8), respectively, and this difference between the morphs closely mirrors the difference between the relative growth rates of apterous and alatiform larvae. It is suggested that mycetocyte loss may represent an important means by which the symbiont population is regulated. The results can also be interpreted as evidence for substantial variation in the characteristics of nutritional interactions between the aphid and its symbionts with age and morph of the aphid.

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