| Literature DB >> 29298332 |
Joseph S Wilson1, Aaron D Pan2,3, Erica S Limb1, Kevin A Williams4.
Abstract
Africa has the most tropical and subtropical land of any continent, yet has relatively low species richness in several taxa. This depauperate nature of the African tropical fauna and flora has led some to call Africa the "odd man out." One exception to this pattern is velvet ants (Hymenoptera: Mutillidae), wingless wasps that are known for Müllerian mimicry. While North American velvet ants form one of the world's largest mimicry complexes, mimicry in African species has not been investigated. Here we ask do African velvet ant Müllerian mimicry rings exist, and how do they compare to the North American complex. We then explore what factors might contribute to the differences in mimetic diversity between continents. To investigate this we compared the color patterns of 304 African velvet ant taxa using nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS). We then investigated distributions of each distinct mimicry ring. Finally, we compared lizard diversity and ecoregion diversity on the two continents. We found that African female velvet ants form four Müllerian rings, which is half the number of North American rings. This lower mimetic diversity could be related to the relatively lower diversity of insectivorous lizard species or to the lower number of distinct ecoregions in Africa compared to North America.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29298332 PMCID: PMC5752001 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0189482
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Velvet ant mimicry complex in 3D ordination space.
Velvet ant mimicry complexes are differentiated in ordinal space (NMDS). In each comparison of the three NMDS axes, the mean values for each mimicry ring are denoted by symbols, with lines drawn from the means to individual species values.
Fig 2African velvet ant mimicry rings.
The morphological and geographic ranges of the four African velvet ant mimicry rings. Each mimicry ring is represented here by five species. These species were selected because they are morphologically closest to the estimated mean for each mimicry ring (see Fig 1). The geographic range of each mimicry ring is presented based on distributional analyses that examined the known range of each species involved in each mimicry ring. The species pictured here are as follows: A Dasylabris arabica, B Stenomutilla argentata, C Ronisia maculosa, D Nemka viduata tunensis, E Smicromyrme mareotica, F Carinotilla cf stipnopyga, G Trispilotilla africana, H Smicromyrme tettensis melanothoracica, I Mutilla astarte ignava, J Dolichomutilla scutellata, K Tropidotilla fimbriata, L Sulcotilla sulcata, M Glossotilla mogadiscioana, N Dasylabroides latona ruficeps, O Dasylabris bassutorum, P Trogaspidia sulcicada, Q Stenomutilla analis, R Smicromyrme tettensis tettensis, S Odontomutilla calida calida, T Cephalotilla ceratophora.