Flies use acetic acid to protect their offspring from parasitoids.

Plants and fungi often produce toxic metabolites, but herbivores and fungivores that evolve resistance to these toxins gain access to underutilized resources. An additional benefit of living in and consuming toxins is that animals can gain protection against non-resistant predators and parasites. Th...

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Main Authors: Kayla F Reddy, Aleksey Prok, Corinne M Stouthamer, Todd A Schlenke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-08-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1013368
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author Kayla F Reddy
Aleksey Prok
Corinne M Stouthamer
Todd A Schlenke
author_facet Kayla F Reddy
Aleksey Prok
Corinne M Stouthamer
Todd A Schlenke
author_sort Kayla F Reddy
collection DOAJ
description Plants and fungi often produce toxic metabolites, but herbivores and fungivores that evolve resistance to these toxins gain access to underutilized resources. An additional benefit of living in and consuming toxins is that animals can gain protection against non-resistant predators and parasites. The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster consumes yeasts growing on rotting fruit and has evolved resistance to toxic fermentation products such as ethanol and acetic acid. We tested whether acetic acid protects flies from one of their most common natural enemies, parasitoid wasps, which infect fly larvae and pupae. We found that both wasp parasitism rate and wasp eclosion success are reduced when fly larvae are grown on acetic acid food, and wasp mothers actively avoid infecting fly larvae reared in acetic acid food if given a choice. In each case, acetic acid results in a greater fitness cost for a generalist parasitoid compared to a specialist parasitoid. Furthermore, fly mothers sense the presence of parasitoids in their environment and alter their oviposition behavior to lay eggs in more acetic acid-heavy food when wasps were present. This demonstrates that flies perceive the competing costs to their offspring of wasp parasitism and acetic acid toxicity but balance those costs to maximize offspring fitness.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1553-7366
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language English
publishDate 2025-08-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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series PLoS Pathogens
spelling doaj-art-65cceb366e9542d4b83a1a95468be3992025-08-26T05:31:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742025-08-01218e101336810.1371/journal.ppat.1013368Flies use acetic acid to protect their offspring from parasitoids.Kayla F ReddyAleksey ProkCorinne M StouthamerTodd A SchlenkePlants and fungi often produce toxic metabolites, but herbivores and fungivores that evolve resistance to these toxins gain access to underutilized resources. An additional benefit of living in and consuming toxins is that animals can gain protection against non-resistant predators and parasites. The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster consumes yeasts growing on rotting fruit and has evolved resistance to toxic fermentation products such as ethanol and acetic acid. We tested whether acetic acid protects flies from one of their most common natural enemies, parasitoid wasps, which infect fly larvae and pupae. We found that both wasp parasitism rate and wasp eclosion success are reduced when fly larvae are grown on acetic acid food, and wasp mothers actively avoid infecting fly larvae reared in acetic acid food if given a choice. In each case, acetic acid results in a greater fitness cost for a generalist parasitoid compared to a specialist parasitoid. Furthermore, fly mothers sense the presence of parasitoids in their environment and alter their oviposition behavior to lay eggs in more acetic acid-heavy food when wasps were present. This demonstrates that flies perceive the competing costs to their offspring of wasp parasitism and acetic acid toxicity but balance those costs to maximize offspring fitness.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1013368
spellingShingle Kayla F Reddy
Aleksey Prok
Corinne M Stouthamer
Todd A Schlenke
Flies use acetic acid to protect their offspring from parasitoids.
PLoS Pathogens
title Flies use acetic acid to protect their offspring from parasitoids.
title_full Flies use acetic acid to protect their offspring from parasitoids.
title_fullStr Flies use acetic acid to protect their offspring from parasitoids.
title_full_unstemmed Flies use acetic acid to protect their offspring from parasitoids.
title_short Flies use acetic acid to protect their offspring from parasitoids.
title_sort flies use acetic acid to protect their offspring from parasitoids
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1013368
work_keys_str_mv AT kaylafreddy fliesuseaceticacidtoprotecttheiroffspringfromparasitoids
AT alekseyprok fliesuseaceticacidtoprotecttheiroffspringfromparasitoids
AT corinnemstouthamer fliesuseaceticacidtoprotecttheiroffspringfromparasitoids
AT toddaschlenke fliesuseaceticacidtoprotecttheiroffspringfromparasitoids