The Roles of Mating, Age, and Diet in Starvation Resistance in Bactrocera oleae (Olive Fruit Fly)
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Origin and Handling of Experimental Insects and Olive Fruit
- (a)
- Insect cage types used in the experiments: The wild adult olive fly lines were housed in custom-made insect cages based on the model of BugDorm cages (Model DP1000B) usually used in entomological experiments [44]. The types of insect cages used in the laboratory for the needs of the experiments were (A) BugDorm-type cages, 30 × 30 × 30 cm3 (colony cages for rearing of the olive fruit fly) (Figure 2a); (B) transparent plexiglass cages with dimensions 20 × 20 × 20 cm3 (Figure 2b), where (i) pupae gathered from infested olives in basins were placed into Petri dishes and then were transferred into the plexiglass cages for the adults to emerge (see experimental procedures and protocol for further information), and (ii) flies on the 10th day of their lives were transferred to mate or to be together with other flies of the same sex; (C) individual plastic cages (Figure 2c), where (i) flies were transferred individually upon their emergence, with either full or restricted diet and water, and (ii) flies were transferred at the appropriate age, each time to a new individual plastic cage that was thoroughly clean of any trace of food to measure the hours until death (starvation resistance).
- (b)
- Diet food types for adult fruit flies: Two different diets were used: (A) a full diet consisting of a mixture of hydrolyzed yeast (protein) in a ratio of 5:4:1 (water/sugar/yeast hydrolysate as protein) or (B) a restricted diet containing only sugar but deprived of protein. Water was supplied to all cohorts through a wetted cotton wick.
- (c)
- Harvesting (non-infested) olive fruit for the rearing of olive fruit flies: Olive fruits used in the experiments were collected from olive groves located in the region of Chalkidiki and Northern Greece. The olives were selected one-by-one by hand in the above regions from trees that were as free from pests and diseases as possible. To maintain the number of insects needed for the experiment and the genetic diversity of the experimental insect population close to that of natural populations, infested olives were constantly collected from olive groves for a period of approximately three months, and wild insects were constantly introduced to the colony. The total amount of olives needed for the experiment was roughly 200 kg (Figure 3).
- (d)
- Maintaining the (non-infested) olive fruit flies: Immediately after harvesting, the olive fruits were placed in glass jars in the refrigerator at 6 ± 1 °C (Figure 3).
- (e)
- Collecting infested olive fruits: Mc Cain traps with an appropriate food attractant were used in the aforementioned regions to identify the period of the first adult flights and the onset of infestation in the field. Olive fruits that had been infested by the olive flies were collected from the trees and transported to the laboratory (Figure 3).
2.2. Experimental Design
2.3. Experimental Procedures and Protocol
- (a)
- Rearing the parents of the experimental insects: Adults from infested olive fruits that had been collected from trees hatched inside wooden cages with plenty of water and protein food. After the completion of their hatching, the olives of their origin were removed, and fresh olives were added (ones that we had collected and maintained in the refrigerator). After mating, the females laid their eggs in the olive fruit. These infested olives were removed from the cages, laid into basins, and covered with a suitable cloth to ensure the appropriate humidity and temperature conditions (Figure 3). After pupation and before the emergence of the adults, pupae were transferred to plexiglass cages with dimensions 20 × 20 cm, awaiting the appearance of the adults (Figure 2b). In these plexiglass cages, there was either a full or restricted diet and water (Figure 4).
- (b)
- Handling the experimental insects before the experiment: Upon emergence, adults were placed in individual plastic cages (Figure 2c) with water and food (either the full or restricted diet). At the age of 10 days, groups of 10 adults of either only females and males (both virgin) or 5 virgin males and 5 virgin females (mated) were allowed to be together in larger cages (20 × 20 cm) for one day (Figure 2b) before being placed back into individual cages (Figure 2c). After this period, the flies were placed back into individual cages (Figure 2c) to eliminate crowding and social interactions (Figure 4). Flies that had been kept with conspecifics of the opposite sex were monitored by a human observer to verify mating. We observed the flies for mating from 16:00 to 21:00 because, in this species, mate searching and courtship take place during the late evening [34,36]. Individuals that had not mated were removed from the experiment and were replaced with others that had mated.
- (c)
- Preparing the flies to undergo starvation (food deprivation): The steps followed (Figure 4): (1) initially, experimental insects (pupae) were placed in Petri dishes in plexiglass cages; (2) upon adult emergence, they were transferred individually to plastic cages with water, half with the full diet and half with the restricted diet; (3) on the 10th day, all insects were transferred to 8 plexiglass cages: (a) 4 cages with the full diet (40 adults in total: 1 cage with 10 males, 1 with 10 females, and 2 cages with 5 males and 5 females in each cage) and (b) 4 cages with the restricted diet (40 adults in total: 1 cage with 10 males, 1 with 10 females, and 2 cages with 5 males and 5 females in each cage); (4) at the end of the 10th day, insects were transferred back to their individual cages with water and with the same diet that they were fed in the plexiglass cage.
- (d)
- Recording of deaths—Calculating starvation resistance: Upon reaching the eleventh day of their adult life, ten individual adults from each treatment at a specific age (11th, 12th, up to 50th day of life) were each transferred to a new individual plastic cage (Figure 2c) thoroughly clean of any trace of food [16]. The insects’ deaths were recorded every four hours due to food deprivation during the light period (four times per day: 08:00, 12:00, 16:00, 20:00). In Figure 5, a schematic representation showing the feeding and starvation stages is given. From the 11th day up to the 50th day of their lifespan, 80 insects (3200 in total) fed the full or restricted diet (40 adults fed the full diet and 40 adults the restricted diet, in each case: 10 virgin males, 10 virgin females, 10 mated males, and 10 mated females) were subjected to starvation in new clear individual cages. Within the period from the 11th to the 50th day, every four hours, the deaths were recorded as a measure of starvation resistance. In case there was difficulty in identifying an insect’s death, a fine paintbrush was used to gently move the insect and confirm its death. Rotation of the plastic cages was performed daily to reduce potential experimental errors. Starvation resistance was finally calculated as the difference between the date and time of death and the date and time of the moment the insects were subjected to food deprivation.
2.4. Statistical Analyses
3. Results
3.1. Study of Starvation Resistance in Males
3.2. Study of Starvation Resistance in Females
3.3. Percentage Starvation Resistance Differences from the Corresponding Gender Mean
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- Mating status: virgin adults exhibit higher starvation resistance compared to mated adults in all age classes.
- Age: younger adults exhibit higher starvation resistance in almost all treatments.
- Diet: adults that are fed a full diet containing protein show notably lower starvation resistance compared to sugar-fed ones.
- Gender: the same pattern of starvation resistance has been identified for both genders.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Balampekou, E.I.; Koveos, D.S.; Kapranas, A.; Menexes, G.C.; Kouloussis, N.A. The Roles of Mating, Age, and Diet in Starvation Resistance in Bactrocera oleae (Olive Fruit Fly). Insects 2023, 14, 841. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects14110841
Balampekou EI, Koveos DS, Kapranas A, Menexes GC, Kouloussis NA. The Roles of Mating, Age, and Diet in Starvation Resistance in Bactrocera oleae (Olive Fruit Fly). Insects. 2023; 14(11):841. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects14110841
Chicago/Turabian StyleBalampekou, Evangelia I., Dimitrios S. Koveos, Apostolos Kapranas, Georgios C. Menexes, and Nikos A. Kouloussis. 2023. "The Roles of Mating, Age, and Diet in Starvation Resistance in Bactrocera oleae (Olive Fruit Fly)" Insects 14, no. 11: 841. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects14110841
APA StyleBalampekou, E. I., Koveos, D. S., Kapranas, A., Menexes, G. C., & Kouloussis, N. A. (2023). The Roles of Mating, Age, and Diet in Starvation Resistance in Bactrocera oleae (Olive Fruit Fly). Insects, 14(11), 841. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects14110841