Divergence and correlated evolution of male wing spot and courtship display between Drosophila nepalensis and D. trilutea

被引:1
作者
Mo, Wen-Zhou [1 ]
Li, Zhuo-Miao [1 ]
Deng, Xiang-Mei [1 ]
Chen, Ai-Li [1 ]
Ritchie, Michael G. [2 ]
Yang, De-Jun [3 ]
He, Zhuo-Bin [3 ]
Toda, Masanori J. [4 ]
Wen, Shuo-Yang [1 ]
机构
[1] South China Agr Univ, Dept Entomol, Coll Plant Protect, 483 Wushan Rd, Guangzhou 510642, Peoples R China
[2] Univ St Andrews, Sch Biol, St Andrews, Fife, Scotland
[3] Guangdong Inst Metrol, South China Natl Ctr Metrol, Acoust Lab, Guangzhou, Peoples R China
[4] Hokkaido Univ Museum, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan
关键词
correlated evolution; courtship song; Drosophila nepalensis; Drosophila trilutea; wing display; wing spot; SEXUAL SELECTION; PIGMENTATION; BEHAVIOR; DIPTERA; ELEGANS; SONG;
D O I
10.1111/1744-7917.12994
中图分类号
Q96 [昆虫学];
学科分类号
摘要
Male-specific wing spots are usually associated with wing displays in the courtship behavior of Drosophila and may play important roles in sexual selection. Two closely related species, D. nepalensis and D. trilutea, differ in wing spots and scissoring behavior. Here, we compare male morphological characters, pigmentation intensity of male wing spots, wing-scissoring behavior, courtship songs, and reproductive isolation between 2 species. F1 fertile females and sterile males result from the cross between females of D. nepalensis and males of D. trilutea. The pigmentation of wing spots is significantly weaker in D. trilutea than in D. nepalensis and the F1 hybrid. Males scissor both wings in front of the female during courtship, with a posture spreading wings more widely, and at a faster frequency in D. nepalensis than in D. trilutea and the F1s. Males of D. trilutea vibrate wings to produce 2 types (A and B) of pulse songs, whereas D. nepalensis and the F1s sing only type B songs. The incidence of wing vibration and scissoring during courtship suggests that wing vibration is essential but scissoring is a facultative courtship element for successful mating in both species. The association between the darker wing spots with more elaborate scissoring might be the consequence of correlated evolution of these traits in D. nepalensis; however, D. trilutea retains wing scissoring during courtship despite having weaker pigmentation of wing spots. The genetic architecture of 2 traits differs in the F1s, consistent with maternal or sex-linked effects for spots but nonadditive effects for scissoring.
引用
收藏
页码:1445 / 1460
页数:16
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