The New Zealand Herald

Avoid sex and live longer: native bug’s prescripti­on for longevity

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Jamie Morton

If you abstain from sex, you live longer.

At least that’s if you’re one of New Zealand’s weirdest native species.

The University of Auckland’s Morgane Merien has been working with Clitarchus hookeri — possibly our most common stick insect, and known for hitching rides to countries on the other side of the world.

The so-called smooth or teatree stick insect has another strange ability — females of the species are facultativ­e parthenoge­netic, or have the ability to either mate with males or reproduce asexually.

Merien collected 80 males and 60 females and split the females into three groups: one group was given a single mate, another multiple mates, and the third, no mates.

Her research showed a direct correlatio­n between lifespan and the number of mates a female had, with multiple-partner females having the shortest lives, monogamous females living slightly longer and asexually reproducti­ve females outliving all the others.

“We know there are a number of biological reasons why sex may be costly for female insects, including physical harm during mating, increased energy expenditur­e and a higher risk of predation,” Merien said.

“But it’s great to have some clear evidence on the link between sexual reproducti­on and lifespan.”

The study also found that asexual reproducti­on, where offspring develop from unfertilis­ed eggs, resulted in a higher number of eggs laid than for either monogamous or polyandrou­s females.

There was, however, one piece of good news for promiscuou­s females: they were more likely to produce viable offspring than monogamous females.

One factor could be the biological imperative of “trading up” — females exposed to multiple partners have the opportunit­y to mate with a higher-quality male if the first one doesn’t quite make the grade.

The stick insects are also found in the Scilly Isles, a small archipelag­o off southern England, and are thought to have got there after hatching from soils shipped with New Zealand plant material more than half a century ago.

Soon after they arrived, they evolved to reproduce without the need for male sperm, effectivel­y becoming just like the asexual New Zealand prickly stick insect, which reached the islands about the same time.

Scientists recently brought some back to New Zealand to learn whether naturalise­d females could still reproduce their old way — or were over the male of the species for good. Merien, graduating this week with a bachelor of science with honours, recently enrolled in a PhD to continue studying the insects. The New Caledonian-born researcher is following in the steps of her mother, who graduated with a PhD in biology in 2016.

“I loved working with them in the lab,” Merien said. “Although it was time-consuming and busy every day, the research went really well and if I possibly can, I’d like to have a career in entomology.”

 ??  ?? Morgane Merien loves working with stick insects.
Morgane Merien loves working with stick insects.

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