The diversity of reproductive parasites among arthropods: Wolbachiado not walk alone
University College London · The London College · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Inherited bacteria have come to be recognised as important components of arthropod biology. In addition to mutualistic symbioses, a range of other inherited bacteria are known to act either as reproductive parasites or as secondary symbionts. Whilst the incidence of the alpha-proteobacterium Wolbachia is relatively well established, the current knowledge of other inherited bacteria is much weaker. Here, we tested 136 arthropod species for a range of inherited bacteria known to demonstrate reproductive parasitism, sampling each species more intensively than in past surveys.
The inclusion of inherited bacteria other than Wolbachia increased the number of infections recorded in our sample from 33 to 57, and the proportion of species infected from 22.8% to 32.4%. Thus, whilst Wolbachia remained the dominant inherited bacterium, it alone was responsible for around half of all inherited infections of the bacteria sampled, with members of the Cardinium, Arsenophonus and Spiroplasma ixodetis clades each occurring in 4% to 7% of all species. The observation that infection was sometimes rare within host populations, and that there was variation in presence of symbionts between populations indicates that our survey will itself underscore incidence.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 34.59
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 76
Authors
7- ODOlivier DuronCorresponding
University College London, The London College
- DBDidier Bouchon
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Université de Poitiers
- SBSébastien Boutin
Université de Poitiers, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
- LBLawrence Bellamy
University College London
- LZLiqin Zhou
University College London
Topics & keywords
- Wolbachia
- Biology
- Spiroplasma
- Host (biology)
- Zoology
- Arthropod
- Parasitism
- Bacteria
- Life in Land