Journal article
Anatomy of a Neotropical insect radiation
BMC evolutionary biology, Vol.18(1), pp.30-30
03/14/2018
DOI: 10.1186/s12862-018-1146-9
PMCID: PMC5853117
PMID: 29540154
Abstract
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.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Anatomy of a Neotropical insect radiation
- Creators
- Isaac Winkler - Mount Vernon, Iowa, 52314 USASonja J Scheffer - Beltsville, MD 20705 USAMatthew L Lewis - Beltsville, MD 20705 USAKristina J Ottens - Iowa City, Iowa 52242 USAAndrew P Rasmussen - Mount Vernon, Iowa, 52314 USAGéssica A Gomes-Costa - Av. Prof°. Moraes Rego s/n, Cidade Universitária, Recife, Pernambuco 50670-901 BrazilLuz Maria Huerto Santillan - Av. Arenales 1256, Apartado 14-0434, 14 Lima, PeruMarty A Condon - Mount Vernon, Iowa, 52314 USAAndrew A Forbes - Iowa City, Iowa 52242 USA
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- BMC evolutionary biology, Vol.18(1), pp.30-30
- DOI
- 10.1186/s12862-018-1146-9
- PMID
- 29540154
- PMCID
- PMC5853117
- NLM abbreviation
- BMC Evol Biol
- ISSN
- 1471-2148
- eISSN
- 1471-2148
- Publisher
- BioMed Central
- Grant note
- DEB-1542451; DEB-0949361; DEB-0330845; HRD-9103322; DEB-1542269 / ;
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 03/14/2018
- Academic Unit
- Biology; University College Courses
- Record Identifier
- 9984217533202771
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