scholarly journals Climate oscillations, glacial refugia, and dispersal ability: factors influencing the genetic structure of the least salmonfly, Pteronarcella badia (Plecoptera), in Western North America

2015 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
John S. Sproul ◽  
Derek D. Houston ◽  
C. Riley Nelson ◽  
R. Paul Evans ◽  
Keith A. Crandall ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klemen Čandek ◽  
Ingi Agnarsson ◽  
Greta J. Binford ◽  
Matjaž Kuntner

AbstractThe Caribbean archipelago offers one of the best natural arenas for testing biogeographic hypotheses. The intermediate dispersal model of biogeography (IDM) predicts variation in species richness among lineages on islands to relate to their dispersal potential. To test this model, one would need background knowledge of dispersal potential of lineages, which has been problematic as evidenced by our prior biogeographic work on the Caribbean tetragnathid spiders. In order to investigate the biogeographic imprint of an excellent disperser, we study the American Trichonephila, a nephilid genus that contains globally distributed species known to overcome long, overwater distances. Our results reveal that the American T. clavipes shows a phylogenetic and population genetic structure consistent with a single species over the Caribbean, but not over the entire Americas. Haplotype network suggests that populations maintain lively gene flow between the Caribbean and North America. Combined with prior evidence from spider genera of different dispersal ability, these patterns coming from an excellent disperser (Trichonephila) that is species poor and of a relatively homogenous genetic structure, support the IDM predictions.


2014 ◽  
Vol 59 (10) ◽  
pp. 2051-2063 ◽  
Author(s):  
John S. Sproul ◽  
Derek. D. Houston ◽  
Nicholas Davis ◽  
Emily Barrington ◽  
Sun Yeong Oh ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 121 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.A. Croft ◽  
E.C. Burts ◽  
H.E. van de Baan ◽  
P.H. Westigard ◽  
H. Riedl

AbstractFenvalerate resistance was monitored in Psylla pyricola Foerster populations at 51 sites in Washington, Oregon, California, and British Columbia during early 1988. Resistance levels ranged from susceptible in an organic orchard in the Willamette Valley, OR, and at several other sites in Oregon and California, to highly resistant (> 100-fold compared with a susceptible strain) at several sites in central Washington. Generally, resistance levels were greater in the north than the south. In the Wenatchee and Yakima/Ellensburg, WA, areas, pyrethroid resistance was areawide, showing similar levels in both heavily treated and untreated orchards. In the Willamette Valley, OR, pyrethroid resistance was local and more consistent with the treatment histories of individual orchards. Factors influencing regional resistance appeared to be the species pool size of resistant and susceptible pear psylla, the intensity of spraying, and the unique host plant, life cycle, and dispersal attributes of this pest. Reasons for high regional resistance in central Washington and not in southerly areas are unknown, but this pattern is consistent with earlier patterns of insecticide resistance in pear psylla. The observed trends in fenvalerate resistance are discussed in relation to limiting resistance in pear psylla.


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