Glucose aversion: A behavioral resistance mechanism in the German cockroach

Current Opinion in Insect Science(2024)

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摘要
The German cockroach is a valuable model for research on indoor pest management strategies and for understanding mechanisms of adaptive evolution under intense anthropogenic selection. Under the selection pressure of toxic baits, populations of the German cockroach have evolved a variety of physiological and behavioral resistance mechanisms. In this review, we focus on glucose aversion, an adaptive trait that underlies a behavioral resistance to baits. Taste polymorphism, a change in taste quality of glucose from sweet to bitter causes cockroaches to avoid glucose-containing baits. We summarize recent findings including the contribution of glucose aversion to olfactory learning-based avoidance of baits, aversion to other sugars and assortative mating under sexual selection, which underscores the behavioral phenotype to all oligosaccharides that contain glucose. It is a remarkable example of how anthropogenic selection drove the evolution of an altered gustatory trait that re-shapes the foraging ecology and sexual communication.
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