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Adaptation to different host plant ages facilitates insect divergence without a host shift.


ABSTRACT: Host shifts and subsequent adaption to novel host plants are important drivers of speciation among phytophagous insects. However, there is considerably less evidence for host plant-mediated speciation in the absence of a host shift. Here, we investigated divergence of two sympatric sister elm leaf beetles, Pyrrhalta maculicollis and P. aenescens, which feed on different age classes of the elm Ulmus pumila L. (seedling versus adult trees). Using a field survey coupled with preference and performance trials, we show that these beetle species are highly divergent in both feeding and oviposition preference and specialize on either seedling or adult stages of their host plant. An experiment using artificial leaf discs painted with leaf surface wax extracts showed that host plant chemistry is a critical element that shapes preference. Specialization appears to be driven by adaptive divergence as there was also evidence of divergent selection; beetles had significantly higher survival and fecundity when reared on their natal host plant age class. Together, the results identify the first probable example of divergence induced by host plant age, thus extending how phytophagous insects might diversify in the absence of host shifts.

SUBMITTER: Zhang B 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4614759 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Adaptation to different host plant ages facilitates insect divergence without a host shift.

Zhang Bin B   Segraves Kari A KA   Xue Huai-Jun HJ   Nie Rui-E RE   Li Wen-Zhu WZ   Yang Xing-Ke XK  

Proceedings. Biological sciences 20150901 1815


Host shifts and subsequent adaption to novel host plants are important drivers of speciation among phytophagous insects. However, there is considerably less evidence for host plant-mediated speciation in the absence of a host shift. Here, we investigated divergence of two sympatric sister elm leaf beetles, Pyrrhalta maculicollis and P. aenescens, which feed on different age classes of the elm Ulmus pumila L. (seedling versus adult trees). Using a field survey coupled with preference and performa  ...[more]

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