Spatial and temporal structure of environmentally-acquired Caballeronia
symbionts of a leaffooted bug
- Alison Ravenscraft,
- Suzanne Kelly,
- David Haviland,
- Johnathan Adamson,
- Molly Hunter
Suzanne Kelly
The University of Arizona Department of Entomology
Author ProfileDavid Haviland
University of California Cooperative Extension, Kern County
Author ProfileJohnathan Adamson
The University of Texas Arlington Department of Biology
Author ProfileMolly Hunter
The University of Arizona Department of Entomology
Author ProfileAbstract
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Animals that acquire beneficial microbial symbionts from their
environment run the risk of acquiring a sub-optimal partner, or no
partner at all. The leaffooted bug Leptoglossus zonatus (Coreidae)
acquires its Caballeronia (Burkholderiaceae) bacterial symbiont from the
environment, presumably from local soil. Despite large contributions to
the bug’s fitness, young nymphs must re-acquire the symbiont every
generation. To understand how the environmental reservoir of symbiont
lineages shapes the insect’s biology, we examined the role of space and
time in the distribution of Burkholderia sensu lato (including
Caballeronia) strains in the bug and the soil. We compared samples
within trees, within plots, within cities and among different cities in
the Southwest USA. We also sampled Caballeronia in L. zonatus within a
pomegranate orchard over two years. We found high Caballeronia diversity
both in soils (29 lineages) and in bugs (26 lineages). Caballeronia
lineages were spatially structured among soils and bugs, with fewer
shared as distance between samples increased. Where a bug develops,
therefore, influences the symbiont strain it acquires, consistent with a
process of passive spatial turnover. Also, while some Caballeronia
subclade frequencies in bugs approximated frequencies in soils, the
coreoid subclade of Caballeronia appeared to be enriched in bugs.
Turnover of strains between timepoints remained relatively constant,
suggesting that the community composition of hosted Caballeronia is not
undergoing directional change over time. Ultimately, understanding how
symbiont strains of varying local benefit are distributed in space and
time will help us predict how geography and seasonality are related to
host fitness in environmentally acquired symbioses.22 Aug 2024Submitted to Molecular Ecology 24 Aug 2024Submission Checks Completed
24 Aug 2024Assigned to Editor
24 Aug 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
12 Sep 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned