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Quantifying variation in the ability of yeasts to attract Drosophila melanogaster
Authors
A Barata
A Costa
+57 more
A Merico
Anne C. Gaskett
AV Devineni
C Anagnostou
C Jones
Catrin S. Günther
CP Kurtzman
D Gilbert
E Vianna
EA Hallem
EA Hallem
FH Simmons
FJ Odling-Smee
François Leulier
G Styger
H Chen
I Giglioli
IJ Tsai
J Piskur
J Stökl
J Zhu
JA Chandler
JA Stamps
JC Gray
JH Swiegers
JM Thomson
JN Thompson
KM Sumby
KN Laland
KS Howell
LB Vosshall
LJ Johnson
Loida Palanca
M Begg
M Ogueta
M Reuter
Matthew R. Goddard
MC Stensmyr
MC Stensmyr
MR Goddard
MR Goddard
MR Goddard
N Anfang
N Moreira
NY Masse
P Romano
PG Becher
Richard D. Newcomb
RM Joseph
S Lebreton
SL Turner
SMG Saerens
T Pfeiffer
TA Markow
WT Starmer
WT Starmer
Y Fuyama
Publication date
1 January 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
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on
PubMed
Abstract
Yeasts that invade and colonise fruit significantly enhance the volatile chemical diversity of this ecosystem. These modified bouquets are thought to be more attractive to Drosophila flies than the fruit alone, but the variance of attraction in natural yeast populations is uncharacterised. Here we investigate how a range of yeast isolates affect the attraction of female D. melanogaster to fruit in a simple two choice assay comparing yeast to sterile fruit. Of the 43 yeast isolates examined, 33 were attractive and seven repellent to the flies. The results of isolate-versus-isolate comparisons provided the same relative rankings. Attractiveness varied significantly by yeast, with the strongly fermenting Saccharomyces species generally being more attractive than the mostly respiring non-Saccharomyces species (P = 0.0035). Overall the habitat (fruit or other) from which the isolates were directly sampled did not explain attraction (P = 0.2352). However, yeasts isolated from fruit associated niches were more attractive than those from non-fruit associated niches (P = 0.0188) regardless of taxonomic positioning. These data suggest that while attractiveness is primarily correlated with phylogenetic status, the ability to attract Drosophila is a labile trait among yeasts that is potentially associated with those inhabiting fruit ecosystems. Preliminary analysis of the volatiles emitted by four yeast isolates in grape juice show the presence/absence of ethanol and acetic acid were not likely explanations for the observed variation in attraction. These data demonstrate variation among yeasts for their ability to attract Drosophila in a pattern that is consistent with the hypothesis that certain yeasts are manipulating fruit odours to mediate interactions with their Drosophila dispersal agent. © 2013 Palanca et al
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