The Evolution of Agriculture in Insects

Author:

Mueller Ulrich G.12,Gerardo Nicole M.123,Aanen Duur K.4,Six Diana L.5,Schultz Ted R.6

Affiliation:

1. Section of Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712;

2. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apartado 2072, Balboa, Republic of Panama

3. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721-0088;

4. Department of Population Biology, Biological Institute, University of Copenhagen, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark;

5. Department of Ecosystem and Conservation Sciences, University of Montana, Missoula, Montana 59812;

6. Department of Entomology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, District of Columbia 20013-7012;

Abstract

▪ Abstract  Agriculture has evolved independently in three insect orders: once in ants, once in termites, and seven times in ambrosia beetles. Although these insect farmers are in some ways quite different from each other, in many more ways they are remarkably similar, suggesting convergent evolution. All propagate their cultivars as clonal monocultures within their nests and, in most cases, clonally across many farmer generations as well. Long-term clonal monoculture presents special problems for disease control, but insect farmers have evolved a combination of strategies to manage crop diseases: They (a) sequester their gardens from the environment; (b) monitor gardens intensively, controlling pathogens early in disease outbreaks; (c) occasionally access population-level reservoirs of genetically variable cultivars, even while propagating clonal monocultures across many farmer generations; and (d) manage, in addition to the primary cultivars, an array of “auxiliary” microbes providing disease suppression and other services. Rather than growing a single cultivar solely for nutrition, insect farmers appear to cultivate, and possibly “artificially select” for, integrated crop-microbe consortia. Indeed, crop domestication in the context of coevolving and codomesticated microbial consortia may explain the 50-million year old agricultural success of insect farmers.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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