Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2840455 Journal of Insect Physiology 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Bibionid larvae feed on decomposed leaves and their own microbe-rich faeces.•Midgut is alkaline, whereas hindgut and gastric caeca are around neutral.•Midgut lumen is mostly anoxic, redox potential is positive in all gut regions.•Low concentrations of fermentation products and lack of H2 was measured.•Bibionids differs from other insects with alkaline gut in digestive strategy.

The saprophagous larvae of bibionid flies harbor bacteria in their alkaline intestinal tracts, but little is known about the contribution of the gut microbiota to the digestion of their recalcitrant diet. In this study, we measured oxygen and hydrogen partial pressure, redox potential and pH in the midgut, gastric caeca and hindgut of larvae of the bibionid fly Penthetria holosericea with Clark-type O2 and H2 microsensors, platinum redox microelectrodes, and LIX-type pH microelectrodes. The center of the midgut lumen was anoxic, whereas gastric caeca and hindgut were hypoxic. However, redox potential profiles indicated oxidizing conditions throughout the gut, with lowest values in the midgut (+20 to +60 mV). Hydrogen production was not detected. The midgut was extremely alkaline (pH around 11), whereas hindgut and gastric caeca were neutral to slightly alkaline. While HPLC analysis showed high concentrations of glucose in the midgut (15 mM) and gastric caeca (27 mM), the concentrations of microbial fermentation products such as lactate (2–4 mM), acetate (<1 mM) and succinate (<0.5 mM) were low in all gut regions, suggesting that the contribution of microorganisms to the digestive process, particularly in the alkaline midgut, is only of minor importance. We conclude that the digestive strategy of the saprophytic larva of P. holosericea, which feeds selectively on decomposed leaves and its own microbe-rich faeces, differs fundamentally from those of detritivorous and humivorous insects, which host a highly active, fermentative microbiota in their alkaline midgut or hindgut compartments.

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Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Insect Science
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