| Literature DB >> 27859046 |
Benjamin D Blanchard1,2, Corrie S Moreau2.
Abstract
Evolutionary biologists have long predicted that evolutionary trade-offs among traits should constrain morphological divergence and species diversification. However, this prediction has yet to be tested in a broad evolutionary context in many diverse clades, including ants. Here, we reconstruct an expanded ant phylogeny representing 82% of ant genera, compile a new family-wide trait database, and conduct various trait-based analyses to show that defensive traits in ants do exhibit an evolutionary trade-off. In particular, the use of a functional sting negatively correlates with a suite of other defensive traits including spines, large eye size, and large colony size. Furthermore, we find that several of the defensive traits that trade off with a sting are also positively correlated with each other and drive increased diversification, further suggesting that these traits form a defensive suite. Our results support the hypothesis that trade-offs in defensive traits significantly constrain trait evolution and influence species diversification in ants.Entities:
Keywords: Ancestral state reconstruction; Formicidae; defense; evolutionary trade-off; trait-based diversification
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27859046 DOI: 10.1111/evo.13117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evolution ISSN: 0014-3820 Impact factor: 3.694