Litcius/Paper detail

<i>Heliconius</i> Butterflies Host Characteristic and Phylogenetically Structured Adult-Stage Microbiomes

Tobin J. Hammer, Jacob Dickerson, W. Owen McMillan, Noah Fierer

2020Applied and Environmental Microbiology39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Many insects host microbiomes with important ecological functions. However, the prevalence of this phenomenon is unclear because in many insect taxa, microbiomes have been studied in only part of the life cycle, if at all. A prominent example is butterflies and moths, in which the composition and functional role of adult-stage microbiomes are largely unknown. We comprehensively characterized microbiomes in adult passion-vine butterflies. Butterfly-associated bacterial communities are generally abundant in guts, consistent within populations, and composed of taxa widely shared among hosts. More closely related butterflies harbor more similar microbiomes, with the most dramatic shift in microbiome composition occurring in tandem with a suite of ecological and life history traits unique to the genus Heliconius . Butterflies are also frequently infected with previously undescribed eukaryotic parasites, which may interact with bacteria in important ways. These findings advance our understanding of butterfly biology and insect-microbe interactions generally.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeBiologyButterflyHeliconiusTaxonHost (biology)EcologyInsectEvolutionary biologyMimicryVertebrateZoologyGeneticsGeneInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesMosquito-borne diseases and controlInsect behavior and control techniques