Skip to main content
Dryad

Data from: Dynamics of the continent-wide spread of a Drosophila defensive symbiont

Data files

Mar 19, 2013 version files 117.32 KB

Abstract

Facultative symbionts can represent important sources of adaptation for their insect hosts and thus have the potential for rapid spread. Drosophila neotestacea harbors a heritable symbiont, Spiroplasma, that confers protection against parasitic nematodes. We previously found a cline in Spiroplasma prevalence across central Canada, ending abruptly at the Rocky Mountains. Resampling these populations nine years later revealed that Spiroplasma had increased substantially across the region, resembling a Fisherian wave of advance. Associations between Spiroplasma infection and host mitochondrial DNA indicate that the increase was due to local increase of Spiroplasma-infected flies. Finally, we detected Spiroplasma west of the Rocky Mountains for the first time and showed that defense against nematodes occurs in flies with a western genetic background. Because nematode infection is common throughout D. neotestacea’s range, we expect Spiroplasma to spread to the Pacific coast.