I wanted to investigate the importance of
bacterial infection during the adult stage in the Glanville fritillary
butterfly (Melitaea cinxia) via oral
infection in comparison to haemocoelic exposure of the same strain. This
species is in Finland only present in the Åland Islands where it occurs in a
classical metapopulation. Adults disperse from habitat patches to recolonize
new patches or fly for foraging and mating. During dispersal events,
individuals might encounter a higher infection risk due to changes in quality
or quantity of parasites. On the one hand individuals might encounter pathogens
based on wounding that might occur due to predators such as ants, spiders and
parasitoids. Such wounds allow pathogens to enter directly into the haemocoel.
On the other hand, dispersal reflects a resource costly event and individuals
might feed on more nectar after dispersal, potentially also increasing the
amount of pathogens ingested.
In a series of experiments that I conducted in
the Lammi Biological Station, I infected male and female adult butterflies with
a bacterial strain to investigate how this species responds to bacterial
infection in general, if the two sexes would differ in their immune response
and if the responses would differ depending on the way the pathogens entered
their system. I measured immune gene expression levels and encapsulation rate
to measure immune response and further was interested in individuals’ lifespan.
Direct
exposure to bacteria via injection as well as oral exposure both had an effect
on the phenotype. Lifespan was reduced for both sexes and exposure to bacteria
resulted in an increase in immune gene expression. However, more immune genes
responded to haemocoelic bacterial infection compared to oral exposure.
Moreover, females did show higher expression levels for some immune genes,
indicating that females invested more in immunity than males supporting the
commonly observed susceptible male hypothesis. One explanation for the observed
sex difference in immune response might be due to different strategies for
reproduction. Females of this species in general live longer and deposit their
eggs in several clutches throughout their lifespan, whereas males are able to
increase fitness via increased number of matings. Thus they do not need to live
as long as females and therefore decreased survival due to bacterial infection
does not necessarily reduce their fitness.
Further studies are needed to investigate the
effect of bacterial infection on reproductive success, to investigate why sexes
respond differently to infections. Infections potentially play a crucial role
in this system, as infected individuals could transfer pathogens to different
habitat patches, spreading a disease and thus affecting population dynamics. It
will be interesting to further look into effects of other pathogens, like fungi
or viral infections, to better understand immunity in this butterfly and
insects in general.
Luisa Woestmann is a PhD student at the University of Helsinki and a 2016 LBAYS grant recipient
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