Female fruitflies use gustatory cues to exhibit reproductive plasticity in response to the social environment

2021 
Animals can exhibit remarkable reproductive plasticity in response to their social surroundings, with profound fitness consequences. The study of such plasticity in females, particularly in same-sex interactions, has been severely neglected. Here we measured the impact of variation in the pre-mating social environment on reproductive success in females and tested the underlying mechanisms involved. We used the Drosophila melanogaster model system to test the effect of varying female group size prior to mating and deployed physical and genetic methods to manipulate the perception of different social cues and sensory pathways. We found that socially isolated females were significantly more likely to retain unfertilised eggs before mating, but to show the opposite pattern and lay significantly more fertilised eggs in the 24h after mating, in comparison to grouped females. More than 48h of exposure to other females was necessary for this socially-induced plasticity to be expressed. Neither olfactory nor visual cues were involved in mediating these responses. Instead, we found that females detected other females through direct contact with the deposits they leave behind, even in the absence of eggs. The results demonstrate that females show striking reproductive plasticity in response to their social surroundings and that the nature of their plastic reproductive responses, and the cues they use, differ markedly from those of males. The results emphasise the stark contrasts in how each sex realises reproductive success.
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