http://www.newsroom.ucr.edu/cgi-bin/display.cgi?id=1418

Crickets on Hawaiian Island Develop Silent Wings in Response to Parasitic Attack

Male crickets use ingenious means to mate with females after loss of sexual 
signal, UCR biologists find

(September 22, 2006)

RIVERSIDE, Calif. – In only a few generations, the male cricket on Kauai, one 
of the Hawaiian Islands, underwent a mutation – a sudden heritable change in 
its genetic material – that rendered it incapable of using song, its sexual 
signal, to attract female crickets, according to a new study by UC Riverside 
evolutionary biologists.

In addition, the researchers found that although the new male crickets’ wings 
lack the file and scraper apparatus required for producing sound, the males are 
able to mate successfully with females, thus ensuring evolutionary success. The 
males accomplish this by simply altering their behavior in an ingenious manner, 
suggesting that behavior can help what may seem like a harmful mutation spread.

The research team, led by Marlene Zuk, a professor of biology, found that 
greater than 90 percent of male field crickets (Teleogryllus oceanicus) on 
Kauai shifted in less than 20 generations from having normal wings to mutated 
“flat wings” that inhibit the crickets from calling. The mutation occurred, 
the researchers conclude, to protect male crickets from a deadly parasitic fly 
(Ormia ochracea) that uses the cricket song to locate crickets as hosts.

Upon finding a male cricket, the fly deposits larvae onto it; these then burrow 
into the cricket, develop inside, and subsequently kill the cricket when they 
emerge from its body. Of three Hawaiian Islands (Oahu, the Big Island of 
Hawaii, and Kauai) where the cricket and fly co-occur, Kauai, where the rapid 
spread of this wing mutation in male crickets was observed, has the highest 
prevalence of the parasitic fly.

Study results appear in Biology Letters, a scientific journal of the Royal 
Society in the United Kingdom, publishing short papers from across the 
biological sciences.

“With each visit we made to Kauai since 1991, we observed fewer crickets,” 
said Zuk, the first author of the paper. “In 2001, we heard only one calling 
male. But then in 2003, although we heard none of the male crickets calling, we 
found they were not only in high abundance but nearly all of them also had 
female-like wings, lacking the fine structures needed to produce song.”

The researchers also found that male cricket populations in Oahu and the Big 
Island, as well as descendants from eggs collected on Kauai before 2003, 
continued to show normal wings. Only on Kauai were the mutated wings seen in 
male crickets in 2003.

“Loss of calling clearly seems to be protecting the male crickets from the 
deadly fly,” Zuk said. “But this protection has a heavy price: the loss of 
its sexual signal. This is obviously a huge loss for the cricket, akin to, say, 
finding that all peacocks in a forest have lost their tails. One might ask how 
then do female crickets locate silent flatwing males?”

Zuk and colleagues propose that on Kauai, the flatwings – a term they use to 
identify male crickets with mutated wings – behave as ‘satellites’ to the 
few remaining male crickets that can call. By congregating near the callers, 
the flatwings enable females to find and mate with them.

To test their hypothesis, the biologists performed a field experiment that 
demonstrated that the flatwings are using the callers as female attractors (for 
details, see below).

“While we were surprised by the extraordinary speed at which the mutation 
spread, what is more interesting is that, ordinarily, you would expect such a 
change in wing morphology to quickly disappear, because males couldn't attract 
mates,” Zuk said. “Instead, the behavior of the flatwings allows them to 
capitalize on the few callers that remain, and thus escape the fly and still 
reproduce. This is seeing evolution at work.”

Zuk was joined in the study by UCR’s John T. Rotenberry, also a professor of 
biology, and Robin M. Tinghitella, a graduate student in the Department of 
Biology. The research was supported by grants from the National Geographic 
Society, the National Science Foundation and the UCR Academic Senate.

Field experiment details:

The researchers performed experiments in which 2-meter radius circles were 
delineated within the habitat of crickets on Oahu, the Big Island of Hawaii, 
and Kauai. After removing and noting the sex, the wing type and the number of 
all crickets inside the circle, the researchers played an island-specific 
calling song from a speaker placed in the circle’s center. After 20 minutes, 
the researchers noted the position, sex and wing structure of all crickets 
inside the circle, and measured the distance from all crickets to the speaker.

Comparing their observations made on the three islands, the researchers found 
that on Kauai, the flatwings arrived much more quickly, and settled closer to 
the speaker, than normal-winged males on the other two islands, supporting the 
notion that the new morphs are using the callers as female attractors.

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