Data from: Effects of inbreeding on a gregarious parasitoid wasp with complementary sex determination
Inbreeding and inbreeding depression are processes in small populations of particular interest for a range of human activities such as animal breeding, species conservation or pest management. In particular, biological control programs should benefit from a thorough understanding of the causes and c...
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Zusammenfassung: | Inbreeding and inbreeding depression are processes in small populations of
particular interest for a range of human activities such as animal
breeding, species conservation or pest management. In particular,
biological control programs should benefit from a thorough understanding
of the causes and consequences of inbreeding because natural enemies
experience repetitive bottlenecks during importation, laboratory rearing,
and introduction. Predicting the effect of inbreeding in Hymenopteran
parasitoid wasps, frequently used in biological control programs, is
nonetheless a difficult endeavor. In haplodiploid parasitoids, the purge
of deleterious alleles via haploid males should reduce genetic load, but
if these species also have complementary sex determination (CSD) abnormal
diploid males will be produced, which may jeopardize the success of
biological control introductions. Mastrus ridens is such a parasitoid wasp
with CSD, introduced to control the codling moth, Cydia pomonella (L.). We
studied its life history traits in the laboratory under two conditions:
inbred (full sib) and outbred (non-sib) crosses, across five generations,
in order to examine the consequences of inbreeding in this species. We
found that in inbred lines non reproducing females live less, the number
of daughters produced was lower, and that sex ratio (proportion of males)
and proportion of diploid males were higher. Diploid males were able to
produce fertile daughters, but fewer than haploid males. Lineage survival
was similar for inbred and outbred lines across the five generations. The
most significant decrease in fitness was thus a consequence of the
production of diploid males, but this effect was not as extreme as in most
other species with CSD, due to the fertility of diploid males. This study
highlights the importance of determining the type of sex determination in
parasitoid wasps used for biological control, and the importance of
maintaining genetic diversity in species with CSD when importation or
augmentation is the goal. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1vm8k |