Affiliation:
1. Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, 32 Campus Dr., Missoula, MT 59812
Abstract
Heritable symbionts have diverse effects on the physiology, reproduction and fitness of their hosts. Maternally transmitted
Wolbachia
are one of the most common endosymbionts in nature, infecting about half of all insect species. We test the hypothesis that
Wolbachia
alter host behaviour by assessing the effects of 14 different
Wolbachia
strains on the locomotor activity of nine
Drosophila
host species. We find that
Wolbachia
alter the activity of six different host genotypes, including all hosts in our assay infected with
w
Ri-like
Wolbachia
strains (
w
Ri,
w
Suz and
w
Aur), which have rapidly spread among
Drosophila
species in about the last 14 000 years. While
Wolbachia
effects on host activity were common, the direction of these effects varied unpredictably and sometimes depended on host sex. We hypothesize that the prominent effects of
w
Ri-like
Wolbachia
may be explained by patterns of
Wolbachia
titre and localization within host somatic tissues, particularly in the central nervous system. Our findings support the view that
Wolbachia
have wide-ranging effects on host behaviour. The fitness consequences of these behavioural modifications are important for understanding the evolution of host–symbiont interactions, including how
Wolbachia
spread within host populations.
Funder
National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)
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