| Literature DB >> 18419750 |
Emmanuelle Jousselin1,2, Simon Van Noort3, Vincent Berry4, Jean-Yves Rasplus1, Nina Rønsted5, J Christoff Erasmus6, Jaco M Greeff6.
Abstract
The study of chalcid wasps that live within syconia of fig trees (Moraceae, Ficus), provides a unique opportunity to investigate the evolution of specialized communities of insects. By conducting cospeciation analyses between figs of section Galoglychia and some of their associated fig wasps, we show that, although host switches and duplication have evidently played a role in the construction of the current associations, the global picture is one of significant cospeciation throughout the evolution of these communities. Contrary to common belief, nonpollinating wasps are at least as constrained as pollinators by their host association in their diversification in this section. By adapting a randomization test in a supertree context, we further confirm that wasp phylogenies are significantly congruent with each other, and build a "wasp community" supertree that retrieves Galoglychia taxonomic subdivisions. Altogether, these results probably reflect wasp host specialization but also, to some extent, they might indicate that niche saturation within the fig prevents recurrent intrahost speciation and host switching. Finally, a comparison of ITS2 sequence divergence of cospeciating pairs of wasps suggests that the diversification of some pollinating and nonpollinating wasps of Galoglychia figs has been synchronous but that pollinating wasps exhibit a higher rate of molecular evolution.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18419750 DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2008.00406.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evolution ISSN: 0014-3820 Impact factor: 3.694