Are Eurosta solidaginis on Solidago rugosa a divergent host-associated race?
Autor: | Stephen B. Heard, Warren G. Abrahamson, Mizuki K. Takahashi, Jonathan M. Brown, Sarah L. Pease, Chandra E. Moffat |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine Sympatry Host (biology) fungi Solidago rugosa Rugosa Zoology Gigantea Biology biology.organism_classification 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences 03 medical and health sciences 030104 developmental biology Animal ecology Sympatric speciation Genetic variation Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics |
Zdroj: | Evolutionary Ecology. 33:369-384 |
ISSN: | 1573-8477 0269-7653 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10682-018-9966-z |
Popis: | The ball-gall fly Eurosta solidaginis is considered a classic example of host-race formation in herbivorous insects, with host-associated races evolving at least twice, including the well-known pair on Solidago altissima and S. gigantea. Yet E. solidaginis has been occasionally observed galling other Solidago species. Here, we explore the origins of E. solidaginis on Solidago rugosa. We hypothesize that flies associated with S. rugosa are derived from the S. altissima host-race, and ask whether S. rugosa-associated flies have initiated host-race formation. We compared genetic variation among seventeen E. solidaginis populations collected from S. rugosa, S. altissima, and S. gigantea, in an adjacent COI/COII region of the mitochondrial genome. Across the study area, E. solidaginis flies from S. rugosa were as diverged from S. altissima-flies as they were from S. gigantea-flies (pairwise ΦPT 0.075 and 0.78 respectively) but S. altissima and S. gigantea-flies appeared considerably less diverged (0.002). This pattern was driven by the majority of flies, regardless of host-plant, sharing the same haplotype across the study area. However, we detected several site/region-specific haplotypes, not shared among host species. At the local site scale we were able to distinguish S. gigantea-associated fly haplotypes from either S. altissima or S. rugosa haplotypes, but the majority of S. altissima and S. rugosa-flies shared the same haplotype locally. These patterns of haplotype diversity support existing evidence of host-associated divergence in S. altissima- and S. gigantea-associated flies, and suggest that S. rugosa flies are either the same host-race as, or are recently derived from, S. altissima flies. Successful development on S. rugosa and the use of S. rugosa in the absence of use on sympatric S. altissima suggests that E. solidaginis either has a single oligophagous race using both S. altissima and S. rugosa or is in the earliest stages of host-associated differentiation. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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