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      A natural population of the butterfly Eurema hecabe with Wolbachia-induced female-biased sex ratio not by feminization

      , ,  
      Genome
      Canadian Science Publishing

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          Abstract

          In butterflies, the adult sex ratio observed in the field is usually male-biased, although the sex ratio of their progeny is 1:1. This is due to the higher motility and larger behavioral range of males than females. As expected, the sex ratio of Eurema hecabe butterflies collected at 6 localities throughout Japan was male-biased. However, in Tsukuba, located in the central part of Japan, the sex ratio was found to be biased toward females. Their progeny reared in the laboratory also exhibited a female-biased sex ratio. A single strain of Wolbachia is considered to be the cause of the sex-ratio distortion, because antibiotic treatment reversed the sex ratio to 1:1, and only a single nucleotide sequence of wsp, a highly variable Wolbachia gene, was detected by molecular analysis. Cytogenetic analysis excluded the possibility of feminization as the underlying mechanism. In addition, when the wild-caught females that had already mated in nature were treated with antibiotics before oviposition, egg-hatch rates were extremely low, suggesting that the same Wolbachia strain also caused cytoplasmic incompatibility. Our findings suggest the possibility that a single strain of Wolbachia induces 2 distinct reproductive manipulations in the same host.

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          Most cited references28

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          Extraordinary Sex Ratios

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            Segregation distorters.

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              Male-killing bacteria in insects: mechanisms, incidence, and implications.

              Bacteria that are vertically transmitted through female hosts and kill male hosts that inherit them were first recorded in insects during the 1950s. Recent studies have shown these "male-killers" to be diverse and have led to a reappraisal of the biology of many groups of bacteria. Rickettsia, for instance, have been regarded as human pathogens transmitted by arthropods. The finding of a male-killing Rickettsia obligately associated with an insect suggests that the genus' members may be primarily associated with arthropods and are only sometimes pathogens of vertebrates. We examined both how killing of male hosts affects the dynamics of inherited bacteria and how male-killing bacteria affect their host populations. Finally, we assessed the potential use of these microorganisms in the control of insect populations.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Genome
                Genome
                Canadian Science Publishing
                0831-2796
                1480-3321
                April 2007
                April 2007
                : 50
                : 4
                : 365-372
                Article
                10.1139/G07-020
                17546095
                78d64f00-d854-4083-9db4-c5be21bedcb5
                © 2007

                http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/page/about/CorporateTextAndDataMining

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