2017
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msx073
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How Long Does Wolbachia Remain on Board?

Abstract: Wolbachia bacteria infect about half of all arthropods, with diverse and extreme consequences ranging from sex-ratio distortion and mating incompatibilities to protection against viruses. These phenotypic effects, combined with efficient vertical transmission from mothers to offspring, satisfactorily explain the invasion dynamics of Wolbachia within species. However, beyond the species level, the lack of congruence between the host and symbiont phylogenetic trees indicates that Wolbachia horizontal transfers a… Show more

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Cited by 93 publications
(127 citation statements)
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“…mosquitoes from both Burkina Faso and Mali), strain variants observed in An . species A, and the concatenated grouping of the novel Anopheles strains with strains found in different Orders of insects, support the lack of congruence between insect host and Wolbachia phylogenetic trees 80 . …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 62%
“…mosquitoes from both Burkina Faso and Mali), strain variants observed in An . species A, and the concatenated grouping of the novel Anopheles strains with strains found in different Orders of insects, support the lack of congruence between insect host and Wolbachia phylogenetic trees 80 . …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 62%
“…Nonessential, heritable bacterial symbionts are even more common among the insects (Weinert et al., ; see Mondo, Toomer, Morton, Lekberg, & Pawlowska, for an example in mycorrhizal fungi). And while their impacts in any one lineage have been likely ephemeral (e.g., Bailly‐Bechet et al., ), they can profoundly shape host biology in insects and host taxa beyond (Oliver et al., ). Impacts of protective symbionts on surrounding macro‐organismal communities have been noted (Clay, Holah, & Rudgers, ; Ferrari & Vavre, ; Jaenike & Brekke, ), as has their relevance to the success and management of damaging insect pests (Hedges, Brownlie, O'Neill, & Johnson, ; Hoffmann et al., ; Hosokawa, Kikuchi, Shimada, & Fukatsu, ; Weiss & Aksoy, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bailly‐Bechet et al. (2017) provide a meta‐analysis of more than 1,000 arthropod species from Tahiti that suggests average durations on the order of 7 million years. However, their molecular data, which involve only two Wolbachia loci and the CO1 mtDNA locus, do not have sufficient power to resolve the issue.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%