4.5 Article

Plastic responses of survival and fertility following heat stress in pupal and adult Drosophila virilis

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 24, Pages 18238-18247

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8418

Keywords

climate change; plasticity; reproduction; sterility

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/P002692/1]
  2. NERC [NE/P002692/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The rising global temperatures are impacting the survival and reproduction of many species, particularly insects. Research has shown that high temperatures affect male fertility in fruit flies in different ways, with heat stress during the pupal stage delaying sexual maturity and heat stress during the adult stage causing initial reproduction followed by sterility within seven days. Heat-hardening in fruit flies may improve survival at high temperatures but does not significantly protect fertility, limiting the species' ability to mitigate fertility loss during short-term high temperature events.
The impact of rising global temperatures on survival and reproduction is putting many species at risk of extinction. In particular, it has recently been shown that thermal effects on reproduction, especially limits to male fertility, can underpin species distributions in insects. However, the physiological factors influencing fertility at high temperatures are poorly understood. Key factors that affect somatic thermal tolerance such as hardening, the ability to phenotypically increase thermal tolerance after a mild heat shock, and the differential impact of temperature on different life stages are largely unexplored for thermal fertility tolerance. Here, we examine the impact of high temperatures on male fertility in the cosmopolitan fruit fly Drosophila virilis. We first determined whether temperature stress at either the pupal or adult life history stage impacts fertility. We then tested the capacity for heat-hardening to mitigate heat-induced sterility. We found that thermal stress reduces fertility in different ways in pupae and adults. Pupal heat stress delays sexual maturity, whereas males heated as adults can reproduce initially following heat stress, but become sterile within seven days. We also found evidence that while heat-hardening in D. virilis can improve high temperature survival, there is no significant protective impact of this same hardening treatment on fertility. These results suggest that males may be unable to prevent the costs of high temperature stress on fertility through heat-hardening, which limits a species' ability to quickly and effectively reduce fertility loss in the face of short-term high temperature events.

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