Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14627, USA.
2. Department of Biology, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia V8W 3N5, Canada.
Abstract
Offsetting the Cost of Parasitism
Fruit flies, like most animals, are vulnerable to infection by a range of organisms, which, in co-infections, can interact with sometimes surprising effects.
Jaenike
et al.
(p.
212
) discovered that a species of
Spiroplasma
bacterium that is sometimes found in flies, and that is transmitted from mother to offspring, protects its host from the effects of a nematode worm parasite,
Howardula aoronymphium
. The worm sterilizes the female flies and shortens their lives, but when flies were experimentally infected with
Spiroplasma
, their fertility was rescued. Similarly, in wild populations of fruit flies infected with worms, those also infected with
Spiroplasma
had more eggs in their ovaries. The bacterium inhibits the growth of the adult female worms, but such is the advantage of this bacterial infection in offsetting the burden of nematodes on reproductive fitness,
Spiroplasma
appears to be spreading rapidly through populations of fruit flies in North America.
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)