Nutritional symbionts can be essential for their animal hosts. The bacterial symbiont of the leaffooted bug, Leptoglossus zonatus, Caballeronia, is acquired from the environment each generation in the 2nd instar. The symbiont is critical for L. zonatus: aposymbiotic bugs are unable to reproduce. We hypothesized that symbiotic bugs excrete Caballeronia where juveniles might find and consume them. We inoculated L. zonatus with GFP-labelled Caballeronia and examined feces of each life stage. We found that Caballeronia is excreted almost exclusively in the adult stage. We then asked if 2nd instar nymphs could acquire Caballeronia from feces. Nymphs were provided with a) feces from adults fed GFP-labelled Caballeronia, b) GFP-Caballeronia in culture, or c) water only. We found that feces-fed bugs had similar rates of symbiont acquisition to those fed Caballeronia in culture, indicating that feces can be a source of Caballeronia for L. zonatus. However, compared to culture fed individuals, bugs fed feces had reduced survivorship and required longer to develop, and surviving adults had reduced mass. Bacterial motility assays showed that in contrast to cultured Caballeronia cells, Caballeronia in feces were non-motile. These results show suggest that feces can be a source of Caballeronia, at least in some environments, however transmission mode can influence success of the offspring.
Sullivan, L., Kelly, S. E., Hunter, M. S.
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