4.2 Article

The life cycle of Micromalthus debilis LeConte (1878) (Coleoptera: Archostemata: Micromalthidae):: historical review and evolutionary perspective

Journal

Publisher

BLACKWELL VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1046/j.1439-0469.2002.00183.x

Keywords

Coleoptera; Micromalthidae; life cycle; evolution; parthenogenesis; haplodiploidy; paedogenesis; viviparity; thelytoky; arrhenotoky; amphitoky; bacterial endosymbionts; cannibalism; matriphagy

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Micromalthus debilis LeConte (1878), has one of the most bizarre life cycles of any metazoan. Reproduction is typically by thelytokous, viviparous, larviform females, but there is also a rare arrhenotokous phase. The active first-instar (triungulin) larva develops into a legless, feeding (cerambycoid) larva. This form either pupates, leading to a diploid adult female, or develops into any of three subsequent types of reproductive paedogenetic forms: (1) a thelytokous female that produces triungulins via viviparity; (2) an arrhenotokous female that produces a single egg that develops into the short-legged (curculionoid) larva, eventually devouring its mother and becoming a haploid adult male; or (3) an amphitokous female that can follow either of the two above reproductive pathways. We speculate that Micromalthus is dependent on maternally transmitted bacteria for the ability to digest rotting wood, and that these bacteria are senescent in males, causing males to be obligately cannibalistic. Obligate male cannibalism, in turn, would have dramatically increased the cost of males, and have created a strong selective advantage for cyclic thelytoky and the other features of the Micromalthus life cycle that minimize the role of the male.

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