Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Sugar traps force cockroaches to adapt new sex 'gifts'

cockroach
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Humans using sugar in cockroach traps has inadvertently led to female roaches being turned off by the sugary "gifts" males use to entice them into mating.

But don't celebrate the demise of cockroaches just yet—some males have adapted new ways to continue wooing , including by shortening the length of foreplay, a study said on Wednesday.

The small but stubborn German cockroach is the most common species of the insect, lurking in kitchens and bathrooms across the world.

Glucose, a form of sugar, has long been used to bait these cockroaches into deadly traps.

Thirty years ago, researchers first noticed that some German cockroaches had developed an aversion to glucose and were avoiding the traps.

This distaste for glucose may save them from death, but it has also put a damper on their sex life, according to the study published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Male cockroaches have a very particular maneuver to attract females into mating.

They lift their wings and expose a special gland that secretes a "nuptial gift," a cocktail which includes the sugar maltose.

The female jumps on the male's back to lap up the treat, which keeps her occupied "long enough for the male to extend his abdomen under the female and engage her genitalia," the study said.

However the saliva of the females quickly converts the maltose into glucose


Some German cockroaches have changed their mating strategy

Females who have developed an aversion to glucose jump off "before the male can grasp the female genitalia," potentially affecting the future reproduction of the species, the study said.

But never fear: male cockroaches who have also evolved an aversion to glucose can now get around the problem.

These males have changed the composition of their nuptial gift, slashing the glucose content and more than doubling the amount of maltotriose.

This  is both hugely popular with females and converts into glucose much more slowly than maltose.

The males also shortened the courtship process, allowing less times for the glucose conversion to take place.

Glucose-averse  start mating in an average of 2.2 seconds—almost twice the speed of other cockroaches, the study said.

The big losers are ordinary male cockroaches, who now secrete a gift too rich in glucose and take too long to start mating for the taste of many females.

The authors of the study from the North Carolina State University emphasized it was important to understand glucose  in cockroaches to develop new ways to control their numbers.

Some scientists have recommended  no longer be used in  traps.

More information: Ayako Wada-Katsumata et al, Gustatory polymorphism mediates a new adaptive courtship strategy, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (2023). DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.2337

Journal information: Proceedings of the Royal Society B

© 2023 AFP

Sugar aversion hampers cockroach coupling



Cockroach Sex Took a Strange Turn. Now More Mutations Have Emerged.

Evolution has saved roach reproduction from an earlier mutation that interfered with how males court females.

When a male roach wants to mate with a female roach, he will back up to her, secreting a solution called a nuptial gift from a gland under his wings. In this case, the gift was rejected.
Credit...Ayako Wada-Katsumata

By Bethany Brookshire
March 28, 2023

Cockroaches are changing up their sex lives, and it’s all our fault. Faced with sweet poisoned bait, roaches first ended up with a mutation that made them hate sweets, hindering their mating strategies. Now, more roach mutations are emerging, showing you can’t keep a good pest down.

Like many animals, cockroaches have a sweet tooth, and that preference for sugar plays a central role in their reproductive activities. When a male roach targets a female roach, he will back up to her, secreting a solution called a nuptial gift from the tergal gland under his wings. The solution is full of proteins, fats and sugars, what some researchers call the chocolate of roach food. The female cockroach will crawl up on his back to take a sample, and while she is occupied, the male will whip out a hooked penis to latch onto her reproductive tract. They will then turn back to back and do the deed for about 90 minutes.

Humans have aimed to exploit this love of sweet stuff to push cockroaches — particularly the German cockroaches that turn up in American homes — out of our spaces. For decades, people used poisoned roach baits baited with solutions containing glucose.

Cockroaches took the bait. But some time in the late 20th century, a new mutation arose — glucose aversion. No one knows how many roaches now hate the sweet stuff, but Coby Schal, an evolutionary biologist at North Carolina State University, suspects the mutation is very common. “There are more and more papers being published on the fact that a whole suite of baits don’t work so well,” he said.

This lack of a sweet tooth saved cockroaches from death, but it hurt their sex lives. The gift that normal males secrete contains maltose, a sugar that cockroach saliva transforms into glucose. But if females had the glucose averse mutation, they did not find the male secretions sexy and turned away before the male could hook on.

But Dr. Schal and his colleagues could not help but notice that males with glucose aversion were still getting lucky with glucose-averse females. They took a close look, comparing mating between sweets-loving roaches and the sugar-free variety.

The male tergal gland (left reservoir occluded).Credit...Ayako Wada-Katsumata

In a study published on Wednesday in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, the scientists showed that the glucose-averse males had accumulated additional mutations. Instead of producing nuptial gifts containing more maltose, they produced ones that contained a more complex sugar, maltotriose. That substance takes longer to break down into glucose in a female roach’s saliva, Dr. Schal said, and “it’s actually preferred by females.”

But even with a sweeter gift, the glucose-averse roaches were taking no chances. Sugar-loving males took a lengthy 3.3 seconds to begin mating with a female while she dined, Dr. Schal said, which meant they only succeeded about half the time. Sugar-free males leaped into action in 2.1 seconds, succeeding 60 percent of the time.


Marlene Zuk, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities who was not involved in the study, praised it, saying it was interesting to “people who don’t care about cockroaches qua cockroaches” and that it revealed facets of how mating behaviors evolve.

“It illustrates really well that there’s this constant balance,” between the pressures of survival and the pressure to mate as much as possible, she said.

But the latest mutations emerged among lab-reared roaches, noted Richard ffrench-Constant, who studies the molecular biology of insects at the University of Exeter in England.

“Whether these are the traits that are really going to emerge in nature I think is open to discussion,” said Dr. ffrench-Constant, who was not involved in the study.

Dr. Zuk added that these mutations did not emerge purposefully. Glucose aversion solved one problem and created another, but male roaches were not going around trying to make sweeter nuptial gifts. For every mutation that helps a roach get lucky, another might achieve the opposite.

“Stuff just happens,” she said. “There’s no guarantee that says you’re going to make it somehow.”

But this time, roach romance has come out on top.

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