Unusual symbiosis (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Friday, September 21, 2012, 16:51 (4448 days ago)

Trading nitrogen for carbon. Bactereia in cells:-http://phys.org/news/2012-09-unusual-symbiosis-single-celled-algae-nitrogen-fixing.html

Unusual symbiosis at larval and adult levels

by David Turell @, Saturday, June 13, 2020, 22:28 (1625 days ago) @ David Turell

A very unusual case:

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/06/200612111405.htm

"Reed beetles are an ecologically unusual subgroup of the leaf beetle family and consist of around 165 species that live all or part of the time in water. The larvae of these reed beetles are aquatic and attach themselves to underwater plant roots from which they suck the sap as food. The adult beetles of most species live in vegetation above the water level and eat the leaves of plants such as grasses, sedges, and water lilies. In contrast with many other leaf beetles, the food sources of the larvae and the adult insects of the same species differ considerably. "The aquatic life stage of the larvae is highly unusual," stated Kaltenpoth, pointing out that the larvae even produce a cocoon under water, from which the mature beetles hatch. Since the early 1930s it has been known that reed beetles live in close symbiosis with bacteria that colonize blind sacs in the midgut of the larvae, but in the adult beetles they occupy the so-called Malpighian tubules, which are comparable to our kidneys. Scientists were also aware that without these symbionts the larvae would not be able to form a cocoon. However, how exactly the symbiotic bacteria contribute to the sustenance of their hosts has, as yet, remained a mystery.

***

"They reconstructed the entire genomes of the symbionts and were able to make predictions as to what these microbes actually do for their beetle hosts. It turns out that the bacteria can produce almost all of the essential amino acids, that is the ten protein components vital to life that the beetles cannot synthesize themselves. This is likely important for the larvae in particular, because the plant sap from roots does not supply sufficient amounts of amino acids -- and most importantly, not enough to build the protein-rich cocoon. "We know this form of cooperation in which most or all of the essential amino acids are supplied from many plant sap-feeding Hemiptera, for example aphids and cicadas, but this is uncommon in beetles," said the evolutionary biologist." (my bold)

Comment: How did this develop by evolutionary steps, since it involves all stages of the beetle's life cycle? It must be developed all at once. Designer required.

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