Search results for " speciation"

showing 10 items of 272 documents

Impact of a social parasite on ant host populations depends on host species, habitat and year

2011

Parasites often affect the abundance and life-history traits of their hosts. We studied the impact of a social parasite - a slavemaking ant - on host ant communities using two complementary field manipulations. In the first experiment, we analysed the effect of social parasite presence on host populations in one habitat. In a second experiment, conducted in two habitats, we used a cross-fostering design, analysing the effect of sympatric and allopatric social parasites. In the first experiment, host colonies benefited to some extent from residing in parasite-free areas, showing increased total production. Yet, in the second experiment, host colonies in plots containing social parasites were…

SympatryHabitatSympatric speciationAbundance (ecology)Host (biology)EcologyfungiAllopatric speciationZoologyBiologyAnt colonyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLocal adaptationBiological Journal of the Linnean Society
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Species-specific song convergence in a moving hybrid zone between two passerines

2003

Moving hybrid zones are receiving increasing attention. However, so far little is known about the proximate mechanisms underlying these movements. Signalling behaviour, by individuals engaged in interspecific sexual and aggressive interactions, may play a crucial role. In this study, we investigated song variation within a moving hybrid zone between two warblers, Hippolais polyglotta and H. icterina. In these species, song is involved in interspecific territoriality and, probably, in mixed pairings. We showed that allopatric populations of the two species are clearly acoustically differentiated. However, interspecific differences faded out in sympatry as a result of an overall pattern of co…

SympatryHybrid zoneEcologyAllopatric speciationInterspecific competitionTerritorialityParapatric speciationBiologyCantoEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLocal adaptationBiological Journal of the Linnean Society
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Low parasitism rates in parthenogenetic bagworm moths do not support the parasitoid hypothesis for sex

2012

The parasite hypothesis for sex is one of the many theories that have been suggested to solve the mystery of the widespread occurrence of sex despite its high short-term costs. It suggests that sexual lineages have an evolutionary advantage over parthenogens because they can frequently generate new genotypes that are temporarily less prone to coevolving parasites. In this study, we looked for further supporting evidence for the parasite hypothesis of sex in an attempt to understand the coexistence of sexual and parthenogenetic bagworm moths (Naryciinae). The bagworm moths and their parasitoids form one of the few natural host-parasite systems where sexual and parthenogenetic hosts are appar…

SympatryMaleParthenogenesisWaspsZoologyParasitismHymenopteraMothsParasitoidHost-Parasite InteractionsAnimalsPsychidaeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsRed QueenbiologyHost (biology)EcologyfungiParthenogenesisbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionRed Queen; PsychidaeSympatrySympatric speciationRed Queen hypothesisLarvaFemale
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Sympatric diversification vs. immigration: deciphering host-plant specialization in a polyphagous insect, the stolbur phytoplasma vector Hyalesthes o…

2012

The epidemiology of vector transmitted plant diseases is highly influenced by dispersal and the host-plant range of the vector. Widening the vector's host range may increase transmission potential, whereas specialization may induce specific disease cycles. The process leading to a vector's host shift and its epidemiological outcome is therefore embedded in the frameworks of sympatric evolution vs. immigration of preadapted populations. In this study, we analyse whether a host shift of the stolbur phytoplasma vector, Hyalesthes obsoletus from field bindweed to stinging nettle in its northern distribution range evolved sympatrically or by immigration. The exploitation of stinging nettle has l…

SympatryPhytoplasmaPopulationZoologyHemipteraGeneticsAnimalseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyPlant Diseaseseducation.field_of_studyGenetic diversitybiologyEcologyHost (biology)Genetic VariationUrtica dioicaCixiidaebiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionSympatrySympatric speciationVector (epidemiology)Host-Pathogen InteractionsBiological dispersalMicrosatellite RepeatsMolecular ecology
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The role of geographic setting on the diversification process among Tephritis conura (Tephritidae) host races

2006

We address the controversy over the processes causing divergence during speciation. Host races of the fruit fly Tephritis conura attack the thistles Cirsium oleraceum and Cirsium heterophyllum. By studying the genetic divergence of T. conura in areas where host plants are sympatric, parapatric and allopatric, we assessed the contribution of geography in driving host-race divergence. We also evaluated the relative importance of genetic drift and selection in the diversification process, by analysis of the geographic distribution of genetic variation. Host races were significantly diverged at five out of 13 polymorphic allozyme loci. Variance at two loci, Hex and Pep D, was almost exclusively…

SympatryPolymorphism GeneticGeographybiologyGenetic SpeciationTephritidaeAllopatric speciationCirsium oleraceumParapatric speciationbiology.organism_classificationGenetic divergenceTephritis conuraGene FrequencySympatric speciationEvolutionary biologyGeneticsAnimalsCirsium heterophyllumGenetics (clinical)Heredity
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Heterospecific female mimicry in Ficedula flycatchers

2014

Mimicry is a widespread phenomenon. Vertebrate visual mimicry often operates in an intraspecific sexual context, with some males resembling conspecific females. Pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) dorsal plumage varies from the ancestral black to female-like brown. Experimental studies have shown that conspecific and heterospecific (collared flycatcher, F. albicollis) individuals of both sexes respond, at least initially, to brown individuals as if they were female. We quantified the perceptual and biochemical differences between brown feathers and found that brown pied flycatcher males are indistinguishable from heterospecific, but not from conspecific, females in both aspects. To our kno…

SympatrySexual mimicryEcologyFicedulaZoologyContext (language use)Biologybiology.organism_classificationSongbirdsSympatric speciationPlumagecomic_booksMimicryAnimalsta1181FemaleFlycatcherEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicscomic_books.characterJournal of Evolutionary Biology
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Molecules and morphology reveal cryptic variation among digeneans infecting sympatric mullets in the Mediterranean.

2009

SUMMARYWe applied a combined molecular and morphological approach to resolve the taxonomic status of Saccocoelium spp. parasitizing sympatric mullets (Mugilidae) in the Mediterranean. Eight morphotypes of Saccocoelium were distinguished by means of multivariate statistical analyses: 2 of Saccocoelium obesum ex Liza spp.; 4 of S. tensum ex Liza spp.; and 2 (S. cephali and Saccocoelium sp.) ex Mugil cephalus. Sequences of the 28S and ITS2 rRNA gene regions were obtained for a total of 21 isolates of these morphotypes. Combining sequence data analysis with a detailed morphological and multivariate morphometric study of the specimens allowed the demonstration of cryptic diversity thus rejecting…

SympatrySpecies complexMolecular Sequence DataZoologyTrematode InfectionsFish DiseasesSpecies SpecificityGenetic variationDNA Ribosomal SpacerRNA Ribosomal 28SMediterranean SeaAnimalsRibosomal DNAPhylogenyGenetic diversitybiologyMugilGenetic VariationSequence Analysis DNADNA Helminthbiology.organism_classificationSmegmamorphaGenetic divergenceInfectious DiseasesSympatric speciationAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyTrematodaSequence AlignmentParasitology
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Overestimation of the strength of size-assortative pairing in taxa with cryptic diversity: a case of Simpson's paradox.

2015

5 pages; International audience; Size-assortative pairing is one of the most common pairing patterns observed in nature and it probably occurs in many taxa with cryptic diversity. Observed patterns of size-assortative pairing in natural populations may thus be influenced by the co-occurrence of noninterbreeding cryptic groups of individuals living in sympatry. To quantify this potential bias, we sampled amphipods from the Gammarus pulex/Gammarus fossarum crustacean species complex in rivers containing two sympatric and morphologically cryptic groups, i.e. molecular operational taxonomic units (MOTUs). Within each river, MOTUs did not interbreed and differed in mean body size. We measured th…

SympatrySpecies complex[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecologybiologymolecular operational taxonomic unitecological fallacyZoologybiology.organism_classificationGammarus pulexTaxoninferential fallacyhomogamySympatric speciationPairingSexual selection[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosissexual selectionAnimal Science and ZoologyMating[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyamphipodEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosis
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Species-specific sex pheromones secreted from new sexual glands in two sympatric fungus-growing termites from northern Vietnam, Macrotermes annandale…

2004

Reproductive isolation in termites is not well known. Our study carried out on two sympatric species from northern Vietnam, Macrotermes annandalei and M. barneyi, showed that dispersal flights and sex pheromones were two important factors in their reproductive isolation. These fungus-growing termites were isolated, partially due to the timing of their respective dispersal flights. M. annandalei flew the first day after rain, while the flights of M. barneyi occurred the second day after rain. However, the flights can also be simultaneous in the two species. Sex pheromones of M. annandalei and M. barneyi were shown to be species-specific. In both species, they were secreted by females from tw…

SympatryTermitidaeCourtship displayEcologySympatric speciationInsect ScienceSex pheromonePheromoneBiological dispersalReproductive isolationBiologybiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInsectes Sociaux
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Ecological differentiation and reproductive isolation of two closely related sympatric species of Oenanthe (Apiaceae)

2010

Oenanthe conioides is a lower Elbe endemic plant species growing in the freshwater tidal zone around Hamburg (Germany). Its closest relative Oenanthe aquatica is widely distributed in Eurasia and grows in calm and shallow freshwater. The two species differ in habitat requirements but are otherwise sympatrically distributed, suggesting that ecological divergence has to be maintained in the face of gene flow. In the present study, we investigated ecological differentiation and reproductive isolation in these two species. An amplified fragment length polymorphism analysis found clear genetic differentiation between the two species implying reproductive isolation. A reciprocal transplantation e…

SympatryTransplantationSpecies complexHabitatEcological selectionSympatric speciationEcologyIntroduced speciesReproductive isolationBiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBiological Journal of the Linnean Society
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