Evolution of water balance in the genus Drosophila
1 Center for Insect Science and
2 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 1041 E. Lowell Street, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA and
3 Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York-Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY 11794, USA
*Author for correspondence at address 2 (e-mail: agibbs{at}arl.arizona.edu)
Accepted April 9, 2001
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Summary |
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Key words: desert, desiccation, Drosophila spp., phylogeny, water loss, evolution.
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Introduction |
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Mechanisms of surviving water stress have been investigated in scores of insect species (Hadley, 1994). These studies have revealed some expected physiological differences, such as a reduction in rates of water loss, between desert and mesic arthropods. However, while highly informative, these studies have generally had a significant limitation. Species from deserts or other arid environments (e.g. grain pests) have either been studied in isolation or compared directly with only one or a few other species, sometimes from a different genus or even a different order. In addition, the experimental methods used by different researchers have varied, making comparisons between studies difficult.
The lack of phylogenetic rigor may explain some of the conflicting results obtained in comparative studies of insect water balance. For example, one might expect desert arthropods to be highly tolerant of water loss, relative to mesic species, yet the insect with the greatest reported tolerance for water loss is a semi-aquatic beetle, Peltodytes muticus (Arlian and Staiger, 1979; see Table2.1 in Hadley, 1994). The adaptive value, if any, of this is not apparent and may simply reflect the ancestry of this species. Perhaps P. muticus is descended from beetles that were highly tolerant of dehydration, and this character has been retained despite its lack of current utility. Without both physiological and phylogenetic information on closely related species, it may be impossible to assign adaptive value to this or any other physiological trait (Garland and Adolph, 1994).
Recent years have seen an explosion in the development and use of comparative methods to control for the phylogenetic relatedness of study species (e.g. Felsenstein, 1985; Harvey and Pagel, 1991; Garland et al., 1992; Garland et al., 1993; Garland et al., 1999; Garland and Carter, 1994). We used these techniques to test whether interspecific differences in components of water balance are, in fact, adaptations that evolved to increase desiccation resistance. Our study system is the genus Drosophila, whose members include both xeric and mesic species. An important advantage of this genus is that the evolutionary relationships of Drosophila have been studied in detail, so that we can interpret putative adaptive differences in a phylogenetic context. In principle, desiccation-resistant Drosophila species can differ from their mesic congeners in one or more of three ways: they can lose water less rapidly, they can store more water in their bodies or they can better tolerate low water content. We demonstrate here that desert Drosophila species have adapted to arid conditions primarily by reducing rates of water loss rather than by the other two potential mechanisms.
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Materials and methods |
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Initial water content was measured as described previously (Gibbs et al., 1997; Gibbs et al., 1998). Five or six groups of 35 flies were frozen briefly at -80°C, thawed and weighed (to 0.1µg) on a Cahn microbalance. The flies were dried overnight at 55°C, then re-weighed to obtain dry mass. Water content was calculated as the difference between wet and dry mass.
The ability to tolerate dehydration was determined using the flies from the desiccation resistance assays. Immediately after death, each fly was weighed, dried overnight at 55°C and re-weighed. Water content at death was calculated as the difference between initial and final mass. Because water content can vary greatly as a consequence of age, physiological condition or other factors (Hadley, 1994), initial water content for a subset of flies was measured during these assays for direct comparison with final water content.
Rates of water loss were measured using flow-through respirometry in a Sable Systems (Henderson, NV, USA) TR-2 respirometer. Five to twenty flies were placed in 5ml glass/aluminum chambers, and dry CO2-free air was pumped through the chambers at a flow rate of 100mlmin-1. Three to eight groups of each sex were assayed for each species. The humidity sensor was calibrated by injection of small drops of water (0.53.0nl) into the air stream.
Data analysis
Because males and females differed substantially in body size (females averaged 53% larger in mass across all species), data from males and females were analyzed separately. Species were grouped according to dietary preference (i.e. cactophilic or non-cactophilic) because this distinction closely matched overall habitat differences (W. B. Heed, personal communication). Four of the 12 cactophilic species are endemic to the Sonoran Desert of southwestern North America (Table1), whereas the others live in arid locations but are not restricted to deserts.
We used the Phenotypic Diversity Analysis Package (PDAP; Garland et al., 1993) to implement Felsensteins (Felsenstein, 1985) method of phylogenetically independent contrasts. To account for potential effects of body size, we regressed our measures of water loss or water content against body size (mass), then calculated independent contrasts using the residuals of these regressions (Garland et al., 1992). Other statistical analyses were performed using Systat 9 or Microsoft Excel software.
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Results |
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Phylogenetic analyses
The results presented above suggest that increased desiccation resistance in cactophilic Drosophila species results from a reduction in rates of water loss (in males and females) and greater tolerance of dehydration (in males) but not with increased initial water content. However, the cactophilic species are all members of the subgenus Drosophila, whereas most mesic species in this study were of the subgenus Sophophora. In addition, cactophiles and other drosophilans are generally larger flies, and desiccation resistance, water content and rates of water loss were significantly correlated with mass (Fig.2, Fig.3, Fig.4). Thus, it is difficult to distinguish whether cactophilic species are more desiccation-resistant simply because of their size, which is associated with their phylogenetic history, or whether they indeed exhibit adaptive differences related to their habitat.
We therefore analyzed our data using Felsensteins (Felsenstein, 1985) method of phylogenetically independent contrasts. To control for the effects of body size, we performed these analyses using residuals of regressions between mass and components of water balance. Branch lengths were obtained from the phylogeny depicted in Fig.1. To assess the potential effects of inaccuracies in estimating branch lengths, we performed a separate analysis using constant branch lengths (Garland et al., 1992) and obtained similar results to those presented below (data not shown).
We had complete data sets available for 20 species, including nine cactophilic and 11 mesic representatives. Seven mesic species were from the subgenus Sophophora, two were mycophilic members of Drosophila, and the other two were D. hydei and D. immigrans. Two cactophiles (D. pachea and D. acanthoptera) were from the nannoptera group and seven were from the larger repleta group (which includes D. hydei to D. micromettleri in Fig.1). This distribution minimized phylogenetic bias between ecological groups. Standardized contrasts were calculated and positivized for these species, as described by Garland et al. (Garland et al., 1992), and regressions through the origin were calculated. Despite the correlations described above, we hypothesized that a phylogenetic analysis would find that desiccation resistance was positively correlated with water content and negatively correlated with rates of water loss and dehydration tolerance.
Fig.7 depicts the results of an independent contrasts analysis of the relationship between rates of water loss and desiccation resistance. As predicted, these were negatively correlated (P<0.01 for both sexes; r2=0.43 for males and r2=0.35 for females). Thus, high rates of water loss were associated with reduced desiccation resistance.
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Discussion |
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Our study illustrates the importance of considering phylogeny when performing multispecies comparisons of physiological characters. The obvious prediction one would make on the basis of habitat is supported by our work; cactophilic species, including desert endemics, survive desiccating conditions significantly longer than mesic species (Fig.2). A simple correlative analysis suggests that cactophilic Drosophila exhibit two of the three expected differences in relation to their mesic congeners: reduced rates of water loss and an increased ability to tolerate dehydration (Fig.3, Fig.5). However, incorporation of phylogenetic relationships into the analysis reveals that the latter correlation is spurious (Fig.9). Instead, evolved differences in desiccation resistance are due solely to changes in rates of water loss.
A potential complicating factor in comparative analyses is that different portions of a phylogeny may exhibit different evolutionary correlations (Garland et al., 1992). In our case, the concentration of cactophilic species within the subgenus Drosophila (Fig.1; Table1) may affect our conclusions, particularly if the relationship between desiccation resistance and components of water balance is different in these species. Within groups, however, similar trends to those obtained between cactophiles and mesic species were observed. For example, pair-wise comparisons of the Sonoran Desert endemics with each of their closest relatives revealed that Sonoran Desert endemics had a greater desiccation resistance, lower rates of water loss, lower water contents and no consistent differences in dehydration tolerance (data not shown). Within mesic Drosophila, the clade of mycophilic species, which occur in cool moist forests, lost water rapidly, had high water contents and were very susceptible to desiccation. Because we observed similar patterns within and between our two major ecological groups, we feel that our overall conclusions are robust and accurate.
Another factor that may affect inter-specific comparisons is intra-specific variation. Geographic variation in desiccation resistance has been documented for several Drosophila species (Coyne et al., 1983; Da Lage et al., 1990; Davidson, 1990; Hoffmann, 1991; Karan et al., 1998). If anything, however, our choice of populations should have minimized potential bias towards species differences. We studied three mesic species (D. melanogaster, D. simulans and D. pseudoobscura) that exhibit significant geographic variation in desiccation resistance (Hoffmann and Harshman, 1999). These were collected from Arizona or Sonora (Table1), relatively arid regions of their ranges. Thus, these populations may have been adapted to local dry conditions, which would tend to minimize differences between them and cactophilic species.
Adaptation of Drosophila stocks to laboratory culture should also be considered. We used recently collected strains whenever they were available, but several had been in culture for over a decade (Table1). We note, however, that the three species in culture the longest were cactophilic and that these were similar in desiccation resistance, rates of water loss, etc. to more recently collected cactophiles. Because long-term culture had no apparent major effects on water balance in our study, nor does it affect thermal tolerance in D. melanogaster (Krebs et al., 2001), we believe that it did not significantly affect our conclusions.
Previous comparative studies of Drosophila species have generally not considered the mechanistic basis for differences in desiccation resistance, but our results are generally consistent with published work. For example, a non-phylogenetic study (Van Herrewege and David, 1997) found that desiccation resistance in 22 Drosophila species correlated positively with mass but not with water content. Other authors have reported that more desiccation-resistant species lose water less rapidly (Eckstrand and Richardson, 1981a), although Eckstrand and Richardson (Eckstrand and Richardson, 1981b) reported relatively high rates of water loss in the Sonoran endemic D. nigrospiracula. Variation in dehydration tolerance has received little attention from Drosophila researchers, and no consistent correlations with habitat have been detected (Eckstrand and Richardson, 1981b).
An important issue, which has received surprisingly little attention from researchers on Drosophila, is the actual environmental regime faced by flies in nature. Previous comparative and geographic studies in Drosophila have emphasized the importance of latitude as an environmental variable (David and Capy, 1988; van Herrewege and David, 1997; Karan et al., 1998). Deserts occur primarily at mid-latitudes, and their severity is strongly affected by local topography (Louw and Seely, 1982), so this approach risks conflating species from very different habitats within a single category. Because we were concerned solely with water balance, whereas previous studies were often also concerned with starvation resistance, we felt that a comparison based on habitat aridity was more appropriate for this work. Feeding habit (cactophily) is not a perfect correlate for habitat, but species feeding on necrotic cacti should be exposed to more desiccating conditions. This assumption is supported by the relatively few microclimate studies concerning Drosophila species that have been performed (e.g. Junge-Berberovic, 1996; Feder et al., 1997; Feder et al., 2000; A. G. Gibbs, M. C. Perkins and T. A. Markow, in preparation).
Our results provide an interesting contrast to those obtained using laboratory populations of D. melanogaster selected for increased desiccation resistance (Hoffmann and Parsons, 1993; Gibbs et al., 1997). Selected flies lose water less rapidly and may contain much more bulk water than unselected control populations (Gibbs et al., 1997). Clearly, water content can evolve under desiccation selection, but has not done so in nature. One potential explanation is that desert flies have water freely available from their food source, necrotic cacti, and therefore have not been subject to selection for water storage. Alternatively, water storage may come at a cost, such as decreased flight performance (Lehmann and Dickinson, 2001). Trade-offs may exist between survival of desiccation stress and the locomotory ability required to find new necroses or to avoid predation.
Even if natural selection has not favored higher water content and increased dehydration tolerance, one would still expect these variables to be correlated with desiccation resistance. All else being equal, flies containing more water or better able to tolerate low water content should survive desiccation stress longer. The negative relationship between water content and desiccation resistance in males was particularly surprising. One possible explanation is that desiccation-resistant flies need larger stores of glycogen or lipid to survive, since the desiccation resistance assay involved removal of both food and water. This need for energy storage would result in a greater relative amount of dry mass, but one would then expect a similar pattern in females. Alternatively, the low water:mass ratios of cactophilic males may be a function of their large testes, which are needed for the production of their large ejaculates (up to 2% of their mass; Markow et al., 1990). Thus, the apparently low water contents of cactophilic species may result from differences in reproductive physiology.
In summary, our studies demonstrate that Drosophila species from the Sonoran Desert and other arid environments are more resistant to desiccation stress than other species. By incorporating phylogenetic information into our analysis, we have demonstrated that that these differences have been achieved solely by reductions in rates of water loss. Although cactophilic species are more tolerant of dehydration stress than mesic congeners, this appears to be an ancestral trait in cactophiles. Their greater dehydration tolerance may have contributed to the ability of these flies to survive and diversify in arid environments, but cannot be considered an adaptation specifically related to evolution in these habitats. Our results indicate that future evolutionary studies should focus on the physiological mechanisms by which cactophilic Drosophila species conserve water rather than other components of organismal water balance.
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Acknowledgments |
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