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Legacy of a Butterfly’s Parental Microbiome in Offspring Performance

Luis R. Paniagua Voirol, Arne Weinhold, Paul R. Johnston, Nina E. Fatouros, Monika Hilker

2020Applied and Environmental Microbiology27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Resident bacterial communities are almost absent in larvae of butterflies and thus are unlikely to affect their host. In contrast, adult butterflies contain conspicuous amounts of bacteria. While the host plant and immune state of adult parental butterflies are known to affect offspring traits, it has been unclear whether also the parental microbiome imposes direct effects on the offspring. Here, we show that disturbance of the bacterial community in parental butterflies by an antibiotic treatment has a detrimental effect on those offspring larvae feeding on a different host plant than their parents. Hence, the study indicates that disturbance of an insect's parental microbiome by an antibiotic treatment shapes how the offspring individuals can adjust themselves to a novel host plant.

Topics & Concepts

OffspringBiologyMicrobiomeHost (biology)ButterflyLarvaEcologyZoologyInsectAffect (linguistics)GeneticsPregnancyCommunicationSociologyInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesMosquito-borne diseases and controlInsect Utilization and Effects
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