Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8488507 | Animal Behaviour | 2018 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Necrophagous flies breeding on carcasses face high selection pressures and therefore provide interesting opportunities to study social adaptations. We postulated that gregariousness in necrophagous blow fly larvae is an adaptive response to the environmental constraints of fresh carcasses. Cooperation is indeed believed to be key to the global success of social species. To test this idea, the development of Lucilia sericata (Diptera: Calliphoridae) larvae growing on low- or high-digestibility food substrate (control or trypsin-added ground beef muscle, respectively) at different larval densities was monitored. Results showed that larvae developed faster and had decreased mortality at high than low larval density. Furthermore, aggregation had no deleterious effect on the morphological characteristics (e.g. size) of postfeeding larvae and adult flies. We concluded that increased density positively affected population fitness, which is a conclusion consistent with the predictions of the Allee effect. Compared with those fed on regular food, larvae fed on high-digestibility food had reduced mortality and faster development on average. From these results, we postulated that collective exodigestion might be an adaptive response allowing blow flies to colonize fresh carcasses before the arrival of other insects and the multiplication of microbes. This hypothesis is consistent with the idea that cooperation may enable species to expand their niches.
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Authors
Quentin Scanvion, Valéry Hédouin, Damien Charabidzé,