Dietary self-selection in Anastrepha obliqua wild females
(Diptera, Tephritidae)
C. Cresoni-Pereira &
F. S. Zucoloto
Dept.
of Biology, FFCLRP, USP, Av. Bandeirantes, 3900, Ribeirão Preto,
SP, Brazil, 14040-901
It has been shown
that some insect species are able to select, among different
food, a ratio which provides a suitable balance of nutrients.
This behavior is called self-selection, and its two basic rules
are non-casualty and its current benefit to insect.
Anastrepha obliqua, a fruitfly species, needs to feed on an
optimum quantity of protein when adult to produce eggs;
therefore it would be advantageous if these insects could select
optimum levels of carbohydrates and proteins. The object of
present study was to verify whether A. obliqua females
are self-selective and whether there is a variation in this
behavior during the all life. Recently emerged wild females were
separated at random in 6 groups with 6 repetitions each (10
females/repetition). Diets containing these sucrose: brewer
yeast ratio were offered to groups from 1 to 5: 5.0g:6.5g
(?1:1), 11.0g:6.5g (?2:1), 19.5:6.5 (3:1), 27.0g:6.5g (?4:1) e
35.0g:6.5g (?5:1), respectively. To group 6 sucrose (11.0g) and
yeast (6.5g) were offered in separated diets, in order to verify
if females would select the same nutrients ratio that provided
the best performance in the first 5 groups. Analysed parameters
were ingestion, longevity and egg production. Ingestion was
greater in groups 1 and 2 than in other groups, including the
group 6, which ingested statistically less from the 2 diets than
all other groups. Ingestion of sucrose and yeast by this group
during the reproductive phase , (1 st to 60 th day after
emergence) was 0.69?0.10 and 0.33?0.06 mg/female/day,
respectively, indicating that females are self-selective,
because this ratio is ?2:1, coinciding with the sucrose: yeast
ratios that provided the best performances in groups 1 to 5:
?1:1 and ?2:1. The other ratios were efficient to longevity, but
no eggs were produced. The sucrose and yeast ingestion, after
reproductive phase, was 0.42?0.16 and 0.02?0.02 mg/female/day,
respectively. There is not an yeast preferential ingestion here
because the nutritional target is no longer the reproduction.
This fact proves the self-selection ability of A. obliqua
females and shows the role of insect's nutritional status and
development stage on behavioral variations with regard to food
choices. Index terms: fruitfly, nutrition, protein,
carbohydrates"
Copyright: The copyrights of
this abstract belong to the author (see right-most box of
title table). This document also appears in Session 13 –
INSECT PHISIOLOGY, NEUROSCIENCES, IMMUNITY AND CELL BIOLOGY
Symposium and Poster Session, ABSTRACT BOOK II –
XXI-International Congress of Entomology, Brazil, August
20-26, 2000.