Using D. maidis and pathogen isolates collected at three field sites along an altitudinal gradient in Mexico, we compared survival in leafhoppers exposed to healthy maize to those exposed to maize infected with one of four isolates of maize stunting pathogens: two isolates of the corn stunt spiroplasma (CSS, Spiroplasma kunkelii) and two of the maize busby stunt phytoplasma (MBSP). Survival improved after exposure to either plant pathogen under both the cooler and warmer environmental conditions D. maidis is likely to encounter during the dry season. Survival varied among leafhoppers from the different field sites, suggesting that gene flow between these populations is limited. The leafhoppers responded differently to the four isolates (i.e., we noted significant population by exposure interactions), but we found no difference between MBSP and CSS exposure. Finally, we found evidence of local adaptation in one leafhopper population to sympatric, as compared to allopatric, plant pathogens. We have shown with this and our earlier study that aspects of the interaction phenotype in the association between D. maidis and the plant pathogens are mutualistic and that this association has considerable potential as a model for studies of local adaptation.
Both the population and coevolutionary dynamics of hereditary male-lethal endosymbionts, found in a wide range of insect species, depend on host fitness and endosymbiont transmission rates. This paper reports on fitness effectsand transmission rates in three lines ofDrosophila willistoni infected with either male-lethal spiroplasmas or a spontaneous nonmale-Iethal mutant. Overall fitness measures were reduced or unaffected by the infection; however, some infected females produced more offspring in early broods. Maternal transmission rates were high, but imperfect, and varied with a female's age, host line, and spiroplasma type. No evidence for paternal or horizontal transmission was found. Ifan altered temporal pattern of reproduction is not a factor in countering the loss of spiroplasma hosts through imperfect maternal transmission, persistence of this endoparasitism remains unexplained. Tolerance of the infection and ability to transmit bacteria varied with both host and spiroplasma line. Analysis of the interaction between the spontaneous nonmale-Iethal mutant and its host suggests this symbiosis has undergone coevolution under laboratory culture.
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