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Diet specialization in an extreme omnivore: nutritional regulation in glucose‐averse German cockroaches
Author(s) -
Shik J. Z.,
Schal C.,
Silverman J.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of evolutionary biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.289
H-Index - 128
eISSN - 1420-9101
pISSN - 1010-061X
DOI - 10.1111/jeb.12458
Subject(s) - biology , german cockroach , omnivore , cockroach , foraging , nutrient , trait , zoology , ecology , computer science , predation , programming language
Organisms have diverse adaptations for balancing dietary nutrients, but often face trade‐offs between ingesting nutrients and toxins in food. While extremely omnivorous cockroaches would seem excluded from such dietary trade‐offs, German cockroaches ( Blattella germanica ) in multiple populations have rapidly evolved a unique dietary specialization – an aversion to glucose, the phagostimulant in toxic baits used for pest control. We used factorial feeding experiments within the geometric framework to test whether glucose‐averse ( GA ) cockroaches with limited access to this critical metabolic fuel have compensatory behavioural and physiological strategies for meeting nutritional requirements. GA cockroaches had severely constrained intake, fat and N mass, and performance on glucose‐based diets relative to wild‐type ( WT ) cockroaches and did not appear to exhibit digestive strategies for retaining undereaten nutrients. However, a GA × WT ‘hybrid’ had lower glucose aversion than GA and greater access to macronutrients within glucose‐based diets – while still having lower intake and survival than WT . Given these intermediate foraging constraints, hybrids may be a reservoir for this maladaptive trait in the absence of positive selection and may account for the rapid evolution of this trait following bait application.