4.6 Article

Asymmetric reproductive interference between specialist and generalist predatory ladybirds

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
Volume 81, Issue 5, Pages 1077-1085

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2012.01984.x

Keywords

host specialization; interspecific competition; mating preference; species coexistence; species recognition

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan [20405047, 20657005]
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20405047, 20657005] Funding Source: KAKEN

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1. Closely related species often differ greatly in the quality and breadth of resources exploited, but the actual mechanisms causing these differences are poorly understood. Because in the laboratory specialized species often survive and perform as well or better on host species that are never utilized in nature, negative ecological interactions restricting host range must exist. Here, we focused on reproductive interference, which has been theoretically predicted to drive niche separation between closely related species with overlapping mating signals. 2. We examined the interspecific sexual interactions in relation to ecological specialization and generalization in two sibling ladybird species, Harmonia yedoensis and Harmonia axyridis. Harmonia yedoensis is a specialist predator that preys only on pine aphids, which are highly elusive prey for ladybird hatchlings, whereas H.similar to axyridis is a generalist predator with a broad prey and habitat range. 3. We experimentally showed that conspecific sperm fertilized the vast majority of eggs regardless of mating order (i.e. conspecific sperm precedence) when a female of H.similar to yedoensis or H.similar to axyridis mated with both a conspecific and a heterospecific male. Moreover, we demonstrated that mating opportunities of H.similar to yedoensis females strongly decreased as heterospecific density increased relative to conspecific density. In contrast, in H.similar to axyridis, female mating success was high regardless of conspecific or heterospecific density. 4. Our results suggest that the generalist H.similar to axyridis should be dominant to the specialist H.similar to yedoensis in terms of reproductive interference. Our results support the hypothesis that asymmetric reproductive interference from the dominant species may force the non-dominant species to become a specialist predator that exclusively utilizes less preferred prey in nature.

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