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1.
J Evol Biol ; 34(2): 364-379, 2021 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33190382

RESUMO

Congeneric parasites are unlikely to specialize on the same tissues of the same host species, likely because of strong multifarious selection against niche overlap. Exceptions where >1 congeneric species use the same tissues reveal important insights into ecological factors underlying the origins and maintenance of diversity. Larvae of sunflower maggot flies in the genus Strauzia feed on plants in the family Asteraceae. Although Strauzia tend to be host specialists, some species specialize on the same hosts. To resolve the origins of host sharing among these specialist flies, we used reduced representation genomic sequencing to infer the first multilocus phylogeny of genus Strauzia. Our results show that Helianthus tuberosus and Helianthus grosseserratus each host three different Strauzia species and that the flies co-occurring on a host are not one another's closest relatives. Though this pattern implies that host sharing is most likely the result of host shifts, these may not all be host shifts in the conventional sense of an insect moving onto an entirely new plant. Many hosts of Strauzia belong to a clade of perennial sunflowers that arose 1-2 MYA and are noted for frequent introgression and hybrid speciation events. Our divergence time estimates for all of the Helianthus-associated Strauzia are within this same time window (<1 MYA), suggesting that rapid and recent adaptive introgression and speciation in Helianthus may have instigated the diversification of Strauzia, with some flies converging upon a single plant host after their respective ancestral host plants hybridized to form a new sunflower species.


Assuntos
Especiação Genética , Helianthus , Herbivoria , Filogenia , Tephritidae/genética , Animais , Larva/fisiologia
2.
BMC Evol Biol ; 18(1): 30, 2018 03 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29540154

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Much evolutionary theory predicts that diversity arises via both adaptive radiation (diversification driven by selection against niche-overlap within communities) and divergence of geographically isolated populations. We focus on tropical fruit flies (Blepharoneura, Tephritidae) that reveal unexpected patterns of niche-overlap within local communities. Throughout the Neotropics, multiple sympatric non-interbreeding populations often share the same highly specialized patterns of host use (e.g., flies are specialists on flowers of a single gender of a single species of host plants). Lineage through time (LTT) plots can help distinguish patterns of diversification consistent with ecologically limited adaptive radiation from those predicted by ecologically neutral theories. Here, we use a time-calibrated phylogeny of Blepharoneura to test the hypothesis that patterns of Blepharoneura diversification are consistent with an "ecologically neutral" model of diversification that predicts that diversification is primarily a function of time and space. RESULTS: The Blepharoneura phylogeny showed more cladogenic divergence associated with geography than with shifts in host-use. Shifts in host-use were associated with ~ 20% of recent splits (< 3 Ma), but > 60% of older splits (> 3 Ma). In the overall tree, gamma statistic and maximum likelihood model fitting showed no evidence of diversification rate changes though there was a weak signature of slowing diversification rate in one of the component clades. CONCLUSIONS: Overall patterns of Blepharoneura diversity are inconsistent with a traditional explanation of adaptive radiation involving decreases in diversification rates associated with niche-overlap. Sister lineages usually use the same host-species and host-parts, and multiple non-interbreeding sympatric populations regularly co-occur on the same hosts. We suggest that most lineage origins (phylogenetic splits) occur in allopatry, usually without shifts in host-use, and that subsequent dispersal results in assembly of communities composed of multiple sympatric non-interbreeding populations of flies that share the same hosts.


Assuntos
Tephritidae/classificação , Tephritidae/genética , Animais , Biodiversidade , Evolução Biológica , Ecologia , Flores , Especiação Genética , Geografia , Herbivoria , Funções Verossimilhança , Filogenia , Plantas , Simpatria
3.
Science ; 343(6176): 1240-4, 2014 Mar 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24626926

RESUMO

Ecological specialization should minimize niche overlap, yet herbivorous neotropical flies (Blepharoneura) and their lethal parasitic wasps (parasitoids) exhibit both extreme specialization and apparent niche overlap in host plants. From just two plant species at one site in Peru, we collected 3636 flowers yielding 1478 fly pupae representing 14 Blepharoneura fly species, 18 parasitoid species (14 Bellopius species), and parasitoid-host associations, all discovered through analysis of molecular data. Multiple sympatric species specialize on the same sex flowers of the same fly host-plant species-which suggests extreme niche overlap; however, niche partitioning was exposed by interactions between wasps and flies. Most Bellopius species emerged as adults from only one fly species, yet evidence from pupae (preadult emergence samples) show that most Bellopius also attacked additional fly species but never emerged as adults from those flies.


Assuntos
Cucurbitaceae/parasitologia , Cadeia Alimentar , Herbivoria , Tephritidae/parasitologia , Vespas/fisiologia , Animais , Sequência de Bases , Biodiversidade , Flores/parasitologia , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Peru , Pupa/parasitologia , Tephritidae/embriologia
4.
Science ; 320(5878): 928-31, 2008 May 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18487192

RESUMO

The diversity of tropical herbivorous insects has been explained as a direct function of plant species diversity. Testing that explanation, we reared 2857 flies from flowers and seeds of 24 species of plants from 34 neotropical sites. Samples yielded 52 morphologically similar species of flies and documented highly conserved patterns of specificity to host taxa and host parts. Widespread species of plants can support 13 species of flies. Within single populations of plants, we typically found one or more fly species specific to female flowers and multiple specialists on male flowers. We suggest that neotropical herbivorous insect diversity is not simply a function of plant taxonomic and architectural diversity, but also reflects the geographic distribution of hosts and the age and area of the neotropics.


Assuntos
Biodiversidade , Cucurbitaceae , Dípteros , Animais , Cucurbitaceae/anatomia & histologia , Cucurbitaceae/classificação , Cucurbitaceae/fisiologia , Dípteros/anatomia & histologia , Dípteros/classificação , Dípteros/genética , Dípteros/fisiologia , Flores , Especiação Genética , Geografia , Funções Verossimilhança , México , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Filogenia , Sementes , Especificidade da Espécie , Clima Tropical
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