Size-stabilized, Hypoallometric, Genitalia Determined for Male Black Soldier Fly, Hermetia illucens (Diptera: Stratiomyidae)

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Abstract

The black soldier fly, Hermetia illucens , is mass-reared throughout the world to convert organic waste into ingredients for pet and livestock feed, as well as frass and other biological products. To promote the optimization of breeding regimes carried out by industrial black soldier fly operations, it is critical to better understand adult reproductive anatomy and its potential relationship with fertile egg production. However, in this species, little is known about how reproductive anatomy changes with respect to increases in body size. Hence, this study investigated the nutritional static allometric relationship between the external genitalia of adult male black soldier flies and their body size. Size differences were induced top-down by increasing the larval rearing density, which has a negative effect on adult body size. For each of 3 rearing densities, a random sample of 30 adults was selected, and measurements taken three times each for the head, thorax, parameral sheath, and gonostylus. Fitting a generalized linear log-log model to the data revealed that for every 10.0% increase in body size (thorax length), genital length (parameral shealth) only increased by 1.8%. The resulting allometric slope of genitalia to thorax size was 0.195, indicating a pattern of hypoallometry. The presence of hypoallometric genitalia in a domestic population suggests individuals should be able to copulate regardless of differences in body size, which is consistent with most other insects. Moreover, this finding implies that black soldier fly genitalia were hypoallometric prior to their domestication and continues to persist within captive black soldier fly populations. To confirm, future work should investigate the direct impacts of hypoallometric genitalia on fitness, especially in flies which have been genetically edited or artificially selected to be increasingly large.

LAY SUMMARY

Adult male black soldier fly shown to have similar sized genitals despite differences in body size.

SHORT SUMMARY

The black soldier fly, Hermetia illucens, is an economically important insect mass-reared throughout the globe; however, a large knowledge gap exists in terms of its reproductive anatomy and physiology. This study examined the relationship of male genitalia to body size, finding a 10% increase in body size corresponded with a 1.8% increase in genitalia size, meaning the structures are hypoallometric. This finding is important because it indicates large and small flies have similar sized genitalia, which may allow differently-sized individuals to copulate.

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