Nyman T, Ylioja T, Roininen H
Department of Biology, University of Joensuu, PO Box 111, FIN-80101 Joensuu, Finland.
Heredity (Edinb). 2002 Nov;89(5):394-400. doi: 10.1038/sj.hdy.6800158.
The larvae of the agromyzid flies that belong to the genus Phytobia Lioy feed by mining in the differentiating xylem just below the cambium of growing forest trees. The genus, which is apparently one of the most primitive groups in the Agromyzidae, comprises over 50 currently recognized species. Most of the species are mono- or oligophagous, and the host plants belong to numerous genera in about 60 families. Thus, Phytobia is an attractive candidate for studies on the evolution of insect-plant relationships. In spite of this, the taxonomy of Phytobia is currently poorly understood, mainly because the morphological differences between species are small. We used allozyme electrophoresis to investigate whether molecular markers could be used to separate and identify species in Phytobia, and to study the patterns of host use in the group. For this, we collected Phytobia larvae from eight host tree species occurring in southern Finland. An analysis of 10 variable allozyme loci showed that there are probably five species of Phytobia that feed on the hosts included in our study: one occurs on birches (Betula pubescens Ehrh. and B. pendula Roth) and alders (Alnus incana (L.) Moench and A. glutinosa (L.) Gaertn.), one on rowan (Sorbus aucuparia L.), and three species with overlapping feeding ranges on aspen (Populus tremula L.) and two willow species (Salix phylicifolia L. and S. caprea L.). Because birches and alders belong to the plant family Betulaceae, rowan to Rosaceae, and aspen and willows to Salicaceae, the host associations of the individual fly species can be explained by the taxonomic affinities of the hosts. However, our results also show that on a larger scale the evolution of host-plant associations in Phytobia cannot be explained by strict parallel cladogenesis (cospeciation) between the flies and their hosts.
植潜蝇属(Phytobia Lioy)的潜蝇幼虫通过在生长中的林木形成层下方正在分化的木质部中取食来获取营养。该属显然是潜蝇科中最原始的类群之一,目前包括50多个已被认可的物种。大多数物种为单食性或寡食性,其寄主植物分属于约60个科的众多属。因此,植潜蝇属是研究昆虫与植物关系演化的一个有吸引力的研究对象。尽管如此,目前对植潜蝇属的分类学了解甚少,主要原因是物种之间的形态差异很小。我们使用等位酶电泳来研究分子标记是否可用于区分和鉴定植潜蝇属的物种,并研究该类群的寄主利用模式。为此,我们从芬兰南部的8种寄主树种上采集了植潜蝇幼虫。对10个可变等位酶位点的分析表明,取食我们研究中所包含寄主的植潜蝇属可能有5个物种:一种寄生于桦树(欧洲白桦Betula pubescens Ehrh.和垂枝桦B. pendula Roth)和桤木(灰桤木Alnus incana (L.) Moench和欧洲桤木A. glutinosa (L.) Gaertn.)上,一种寄生于花楸(欧洲花楸Sorbus aucuparia L.)上,还有3个物种在山杨(欧洲山杨Populus tremula L.)以及两种柳树(柳叶菜柳Salix phylicifolia L.和黄花柳S. caprea L.)上的取食范围有重叠。由于桦树和桤木属于桦木科植物,花楸属于蔷薇科,山杨和柳树属于杨柳科,单个蝇类物种的寄主关联可以通过寄主的分类学亲缘关系来解释。然而,我们的结果还表明,从更大的尺度来看,植潜蝇属中寄主植物关联的演化不能通过蝇类与其寄主之间严格的平行分支发生(共物种形成)来解释。