Does getting defensive get you anywhere?--- Seasonally varying selection
in pea aphids shapes a dynamic infection polymorphism with a protective
bacterial endosymbiont
Abstract
Facultative, heritable endosymbionts are found at intermediate
prevalence within most insect species, playing frequent roles in their
hosts’ defense against environmental pressures. Focusing on Hamiltonella
defensa, a common bacterial endosymbiont of aphids, we tested the
hypothesis that such pressures impose seasonal balancing selection,
shaping a widespread infection polymorphism. In our studied pea aphid
(Acyrthosiphon pisum) population, Hamiltonella infection frequencies
ranged from 23.2% to 68.1% across a six-month longitudinal survey.
Rapid spikes and declines were consistent across fields, and we
estimated that selection coefficients, for Hamiltonella-infected aphids,
changed sign within this single season. Prior laboratory research
suggested anti-parasitoid defense as the major Hamiltonella benefit, and
costs under parasitoid absence. While a prior field study supported
these forces as counter-weights in a regime of seasonal balancing
selection, our present survey showed no significant relationship between
parasitoid wasps and Hamiltonella. Field cage experiments provided some
explanation: parasitoids drove ~10% boosts to
Hamiltonella frequencies that would be hard to detect under less
controlled conditions. They also showed that Hamiltonella was not always
costly under parasitoid exclusion, contradicting another long-held
prediction. Instead, our longitudinal survey – and two overwintering
studies - showed temperature to be the strongest predictor of
Hamiltonella infection, matching some lab discoveries, and suggesting
thermally sensitive costs and benefits, unrelated to parasitism, can
shape this symbiont’s prevalence. These results add to a growing body of
evidence arguing for rapid, seasonal adaptation in multivoltine
organisms. For many insects, such adaptation may be mediated through the
diverse impacts of heritable symbionts on host phenotypes.