| Literature DB >> 29113696 |
Sören Nylin1, Salvatore Agosta2, Staffan Bensch3, Walter A Boeger4, Mariana P Braga5, Daniel R Brooks6, Matthew L Forister7, Peter A Hambäck8, Eric P Hoberg9, Tommi Nyman10, Alexander Schäpers5, Alycia L Stigall11, Christopher W Wheat5, Martin Österling12, Niklas Janz5.
Abstract
Parasite-host and insect-plant research have divergent traditions despite the fact that most phytophagous insects live parasitically on their host plants. In parasitology it is a traditional assumption that parasites are typically highly specialized; cospeciation between parasites and hosts is a frequently expressed default expectation. Insect-plant theory has been more concerned with host shifts than with cospeciation, and more with hierarchies among hosts than with extreme specialization. We suggest that the divergent assumptions in the respective fields have hidden a fundamental similarity with an important role for potential as well as actual hosts, and hence for host colonizations via ecological fitting. A common research program is proposed which better prepares us for the challenges from introduced species and global change.Keywords: cospeciation; emerging infectious disease; global change; parasites; phytophagy; species associations
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29113696 DOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2017.10.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trends Ecol Evol ISSN: 0169-5347 Impact factor: 17.712