1. An Olfactory Shift Is Associated with Male Perfume Differentiation and Species Divergence in Orchid Bees
- Author
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Eltz, Thomas, Zimmermann, Yvonne, Pfeiffer, Carolin, Pech, Jorge Ramirez, Twele, Robert, Francke, Wittko, Quezada-Euan, J. Javier G., and Lunau, Klaus
- Subjects
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BEES , *INSECT societies , *ESSENTIAL oils , *INSECT sex attractants , *HABITATS , *POPULATION genetics - Abstract
Summary: Saltational changes may underlie the diversification of pheromone communication systems in insects, which are normally under stabilizing selection favoring high specificity in signals and signal perception . In orchid bees (Euglossini), the production of male signals depends on the sense of smell: males collect complex blends of volatiles (perfumes) from their environment , which are later emitted as pheromone analogs at mating sites . We analyzed the behavioral and antennal response to perfume components in two male morphotypes of Euglossa cf. viridissima from Mexico, which differ in the number of mandibular teeth. Tridentate males collected 2-hydroxy-6-nona-1,3-dienyl-benzaldehyde (HNDB) as the dominant component of their perfume. In bidentate males, blends were broadly similar but lacked HNDB. Population genetic analysis revealed that tri- and bidentate males belong to two reproductively isolated lineages. Electroantennogram tests (EAG and GC-EAD) showed substantially lower antennal responses to HNDB in bidentate versus tridentate males, revealing for the first time a mechanism by which closely related species acquire different chemical compounds from their habitat. The component-specific differences in perfume perception and collection in males of two sibling species are in agreement with a saltational, olfaction-driven mode of signal perfume evolution. However, the response of females to the diverged signals remains unknown. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
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