recent speciation event
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

2
(FIVE YEARS 0)

H-INDEX

1
(FIVE YEARS 0)

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satoshi Kakishima ◽  
Nobuko Tuno ◽  
Kentaro Hosaka ◽  
Tomoko Okamoto ◽  
Takuro Ito ◽  
...  

AbstractDespite its potential effectiveness for outcrossing, few examples of pollination via mushroom mimicry have been reported. This may be because the conditions under which the strategy can evolve are limited and/or because demonstrating it is challenging. Arisaema is a plant genus that has been suggested to adopt mushroom mimicry for pollination, although no compelling evidence for this has yet been demonstrated. Here, we report that Arisaema sikokianum utilizes mostly a single genus of obligate mycophagous flies (Mycodrosophila) as pollinators, and that the insect community dominated by Mycodrosophila is strikingly similar to those found on some species of wood-decaying fungi. Comparative chemical analyses of Arisaema spp. and various mushrooms further revealed that only A. sikokianum emits a set of volatile compounds shared with some mushroom species utilized by Mycodrosophila. Meanwhile, other closely related and often sympatric Arisaema species do not possess such typical traits of mushroom mimicry or attract Mycodrosophila, thereby likely achieving substantial reproductive isolation from A. sikokianum. Our finding indicates that mushroom mimicry is an exceptional and derived state in the genus Arisaema, thus providing an unprecedented opportunity to study the mechanisms underlying the coordinated acquisition of mimicry traits that occurred during a recent speciation event.



Nematology ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wilfrida Decraemer ◽  
Juan E. Palomares-Rius ◽  
Carolina Cantalapiedra-Navarrete ◽  
Blanca B. Landa ◽  
Isabel Duarte ◽  
...  

During a survey for Trichodoridae in cultivated and natural environments, mainly from southern Spain, 7 new Trichodorus species were found. Four of them, T. andalusicus n. sp., T. asturanus n. sp., T. silvestris n. sp. and T. parasilvestris n. sp., belong to the T. lusitanicus morpho-species group characterised in the male by the slightly ventrally curved spicules with a mid-blade constriction with bristles, and in the female by well developed, rounded triangular to quadrangular, vaginal sclerotised pieces. They were mainly differentiated based upon differences in body length, onchiostyle length, spicule shape and number of ventromedian cervical papillae in the male, and size and shape of the vaginal sclerotised pieces in the female. The presence of the T. lusitanicus morpho-species group with 8 species, apparently endemic to the Iberian Peninsula, could point to a recent speciation event. Additionally, 3 new species, T. onubensis n. sp., T. iliplaensis n. sp. and T. paragiennensis n. sp., more closely resembling the morpho-species group of T. sparsus, to which the Spanish species T. giennensis also belongs, were identified. They were differentiated based on body length, length of onchiostyle and position of the secretory-excretory pore and, in the male, by length and shape of the spicules and number of ventromedian cervical papillae and in the female by the vaginal sclerotised pieces. Molecular support to differentiate the new species using the D2-D3 expansion segments of 28S rDNA is also provided. In addition, a new population of T. variabilis from Greece was studied as well as T. lusitanicus type specimens, and a population of T. giennensis and T. lusitanicus were also sequenced.



Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document