Reproductive |
Female mating behaviour |
Pre-mating isolation via selective mate avoidance, i.e., avoiding mates harboring another, incompatible symbiont variant. |
Wolbachia
|
Drosophila paulistorum [71] |
“ |
Females of thelytokous host strain inseminated less often than arrhenotokous (sexual) females. |
Wolbachia
|
Apoanagyrus diversicornis [55] |
“ |
Reproductive barrier between antibiotic-induced males and females due to nonreceptivity of females. |
Unknown, but not Wolbachia
|
Galeopsomyia fausta [91] |
Female mating behaviour (and anatomy) |
Females reluctant to mate and also have ananatomical alteration: major spermathecal muscle absent |
Wolbachia
|
Muscidifurax uniraptor [53] |
Mate choice |
Assortative mating dependent on genotype, infection status and combination. |
Wolbachia
|
Drosophila melanogaster [92] |
“ |
Males prefer real females to feminized genetic males |
Wolbachia
|
Armadillidum vulgare [93] |
“ |
Uninfected females prefer uninfected males |
Wolbachia
|
Tetranychus urticae [21] |
Male-male competition |
Infected males are more competitive (more likely to mate with tester female when in direct competition) |
Wolbachia
|
Drosophila melanogaster [73] |
Male mating rate |
Infected males mate more than uninfected counterparts |
Wolbachia
|
Drosophila melanogaster & D. simulans [94] |
“ |
Male ability to mate multiply higher in species harbouring feminizing symbiont |
Wolbachia
|
Comparative analysis including 7 isopod species, five with feminizing versus two with CI-inducing Wolbachia symbionts [95] |
Male fertility |
Infected males do not produce mature sperm |
Wolbachia
|
Muscidifurax uniraptor [53] |
Aggregating/Lekking |
Sex role reversal: females aggregate on hilltops to attract rare males |
Wolbachia
|
Acraea encedon [22] |
Female post-copulatory behaviour |
Influence on offspring sex ratio via alteration of female post-copulatory position |
Wolbachia
|
Pityohyphantes phrygianus [96] |
Oviposition |
Infected females aggregate offspring |
Wolbachia
|
Tetranychus urticae [21] |
“ |
|
Wolbachia
|
Encarsia hispida [97] |
“ |
Cured females accept one host type at the same rate as control females but parasitized significantly fewer of the other host type. |
Cardinium
|
Encarsia pergandiella [58] |
Oviposition substrate preference |
Uninfected flies preferentially lay eggs on wheat substrate, whereas infected flies do not exert apparent preference for a particular substrate |
Wolbachia |
Drosophila melanogaster [72] |
Oviposition choice |
Infection affects host choice (i.e., number of eggs laid in particular host type) |
Cardinium
|
Encarsia pergandiella [98] |
Non-reproductive |
Larval competitive ability |
Offspring of infected females are more competitive |
Wolbachia |
Drosophila melanogaster [20] |
Dispersal |
Infected females are less likely to adopt long-range dispersal behaviour (ballooning) |
Rickettsia
|
Erigone atra [19] |