Biological Journal of the Linnean Society
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Published By Oxford University Press

1095-8312, 0024-4066

Author(s):  
Tadashi Shinohara ◽  
Yasuoki Takami

Abstract The prey preference of a predator can impose natural selection on prey phenotypes, including body size. Despite evidence that large body size protects against predation in insects, the determinants of body size variation in Cassidinae leaf beetles are not well understood. We examined the prey preference of the digger wasp Cerceris albofasciata, a specialist predator of adult Cassidinae leaf beetles, and found evidence for natural selection on prey body size. The wasp hunted prey smaller than the size of their nest entrance. However, the wasp preferred larger prey species among those that could be carried into their nest. Thus, the benefits of large prey and the cost associated with nest expansion might determine the prey size preference. As expected from the prey species preference, the wasp preferred small individuals of the largest prey species, Thlaspida biramosa, and large individuals of the smallest prey species, Cassida piperata, resulting in natural selection on body sizes. In intermediate-sized prey species, however, there was no evidence for selection on body size. Natural selection on body size might explain the variation of prey morphologies that increase body size, such as explanate margins, in this group.


Author(s):  
Moe Onuma ◽  
Yoshitaka Kamimura ◽  
Kyoichi Sawamura

Abstract Animal genitalia have changed substantially and rapidly during evolution, and functionally interacting anatomical structures complementarily match between the sexes. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain how such structure-matching evolved. A test of these hypotheses would require a detailed analysis of male and female genitalia among closely related species and a comparison of the functional aspects of the interacting structures between the sexes. Therefore, here we document genital coupling and copulatory wounds in the four species of the Drosophila auraria complex. The position of the protrusion of the median gonocoxite of males relative to the female terminalia differed among the species, which may reflect differences in protrusion morphology. Species-specific female structures were discovered on the membrane between the genitalia and analia and on the vaginal wall. The former makes contact with the protrusion, and the latter makes contact with appendages of the aedeagus. Copulatory wounds, which are produced during copulation, were seen at three locations on females: depressions near the genital orifice, the membrane between the genitalia and analia, and the vaginal wall. Some of the copulatory wounds were located at sites that could potentially make contact with the species-specific structures that we identified. We speculate that the female structures that differ between species of the D. auraria complex evolved in concert with the genitalia of male conspecifics.


Author(s):  
Luke M Bower ◽  
David E Saenz ◽  
Kirk O Winemiller

Abstract Convergent evolution, the evolution of similar phenotypes among distantly related lineages, is often attributed to adaptation in response to similar selective pressures. Here, we assess the prevalence and degree of convergence in functional traits of stream fishes at the microhabitat scale in five zoogeographical regions across the world. We categorized species by microhabitat, water velocity and preference for substrate complexity and calculated the prevalence of convergence, degree of convergence and functional diversity for each category. Among species occupying similar microhabitats of small, low-gradient streams, 34% had combinations of convergent traits. Convergence occurred at higher rates than expected by chance alone, implying that adaptation to similar environmental conditions often resulted in similar evolutionary patterns along multiple niche dimensions. Two of the microhabitat groupings had significantly convergent species represented in all zoogeographical regions. Fishes occupying microhabitats with high water velocity and low structural complexity generally occupied a restricted morphospace and exhibited greater prevalence and higher degrees of convergence. This suggests that water velocity and habitat structural complexity interact, selecting a restricted distribution of trait distributions and higher degrees of convergence in stream fish assemblages. Furthermore, these results suggest that microhabitat features in streams select for fish trait distributions in a fairly predictable and deterministic manner worldwide.


Author(s):  
Pável Matos-Maraví ◽  
Niklas Wahlberg ◽  
André V L Freitas ◽  
Phil Devries ◽  
Alexandre Antonelli ◽  
...  

Abstract Regional species diversity is explained ultimately by speciation, extinction and dispersal. Here, we estimate dispersal and speciation rates of Neotropical butterflies to propose an explanation for the distribution and diversity of extant species. We focused on the tribe Brassolini (owl butterflies and allies), a Neotropical group that comprises 17 genera and 108 species, most of them endemic to rainforest biomes. We inferred a robust species tree using the multispecies coalescent framework and a dataset including molecular and morphological characters. This formed the basis for three changes in Brassolini classification: (1) Naropina syn. nov. is subsumed within Brassolina; (2) Aponarope syn. nov. is subsumed within Narope; and (3) Selenophanes orgetorix comb. nov. is reassigned from Catoblepia to Selenophanes. By applying biogeographical stochastic mapping, we found contrasting species diversification and dispersal dynamics across rainforest biomes, which might be explained, in part, by the geological and environmental history of each bioregion. Our results revealed a mosaic of biome-specific evolutionary histories within the Neotropics, where butterfly species have diversified rapidly (cradles: Mesoamerica), have accumulated gradually (museums: Atlantic Forest) or have diversified and accumulated alternately (Amazonia). Our study contributes evidence from a major butterfly lineage that the Neotropics are a museum and a cradle of species diversity.


Author(s):  
Erik Baatrup ◽  
Anders O Rasmussen ◽  
Hans Malte ◽  
Søren Toft

Abstract Here, we investigate the spontaneous locomotor patterns in three spiders with different hunting strategies. The locomotor activity of adult wolf spiders Pardosa amentata, with a sit-and-move hunting strategy, has previously been demonstrated to follow strictly mathematical rules, with most time spent at lower velocities and exponentially decreasing time spent at increasing velocities. Likewise, they have an abundance of short quiescent (resting) periods following a power decay function towards longer quiescent periods. In the present study, we explored whether similar distributions were expressed in juveniles of P. amentata and in two other spider species with different hunting strategies: the sit-and-wait spider Xysticus cristatus and the actively searching sac spider Clubiona phragmitis. We found that all three spider species followed the same two general rules of movement. However, there were differences among the three species. On a logarithmic scale of exponential velocities and a double-logarithmic scale of the rest power decay function, the slopes of the lines for the three species differed. We propose that these differences reflect the behavioural and locomotor differences of the three hunting strategies. Furthermore, we compare our results with similar movement distributions in single cells, fruit flies, mice and even humans.


Author(s):  
Dimitri Neaux ◽  
Gabriele Sansalone ◽  
François Lecompte ◽  
Ashleigh Haruda ◽  
Renate Schafberg ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Kyle Christie ◽  
Jonathan P Doan ◽  
Wendy C Mcbride ◽  
Sharon Y Strauss

Abstract Floral visitors influence reproductive interactions among sympatric plant species, either by facilitating assortative mating and contributing to reproductive isolation, or by promoting heterospecific pollen transfer, potentially leading to reproductive interference or hybridization. We assessed preference and constancy of floral visitors on two co-occurring jewelflowers [Streptanthus breweri and Streptanthus hesperidis (Brassicaceae)] using field arrays, and quantified two floral rewards potentially important to foraging choice – pollen production and nectar sugar concentration – in a greenhouse common garden. Floral visitors made an abundance of conspecific transitions between S. breweri individuals, which thus experienced minimal opportunities for heterospecific pollen transfer from S. hesperidis. In contrast, behavioural isolation for S. hesperidis was essentially absent due to pollinator inconstancy. This pattern emerged across multiple biotic environments and was unrelated to local density dependence. S. breweri populations that were sympatric with S. hesperidis had higher nectar sugar concentrations than their sympatric congeners, as well as allopatric conspecifics. Previous work shows that S. breweri suffers a greater cost to hybridization than S. hesperidis, and here we find that it also shows asymmetrical floral isolation and floral trait displacement in sympatry. These findings suggest that trait divergence may reduce negative reproductive interactions between sympatric but genetically incompatible relatives.


2021 ◽  
Vol 133 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-56
Author(s):  
Matthew J Mitchell ◽  
Anjali Goswami ◽  
Ryan N Felice

Abstract The study of integration and modularity aims to describe the organization of components that make up organisms, and the evolutionary, developmental and functional relationships among them. Both have been studied at the interspecific (evolutionary) and intraspecific (phenotypic and ontogenetic) levels to different degrees across various clades. Although evolutionary modularity and integration are well-characterized across birds, knowledge of intraspecific patterns is lacking. Here, we use a high-density, three-dimensional geometric morphometric approach to investigate patterns of integration and modularity in Psittacula krameri, a highly successful invasive parrot species that exhibits the derived vertical palate and cranio-facial hinge of the Psittaciformes. Showing a pattern of nine distinct cranial modules, our results support findings from recent research that uses similar methods to investigate interspecific integration in birds. Allometry is not a significant influence on cranial shape variation within this species; however, within-module integration is significantly negatively correlated with disparity, with high variation concentrated in the weakly integrated rostrum, palate and vault modules. As previous studies have demonstrated differences in beak shape between invasive and native populations, variation in the weakly integrated palate and rostrum may have facilitated evolutionary change in these parts of the skull, contributing to the ring-necked parakeet’s success as an invasive species.


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