Weckstein Jason D
Department of Biological Sciences and Museum of Natural Science, 119 Foster Hall, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803-3216, USA.
Syst Biol. 2004 Feb;53(1):154-64. doi: 10.1080/10635150490265085.
Historically, comparisons of host and parasite phylogenies have concentrated on cospeciation. However, many of these comparisons have demonstrated that the phylogenies of hosts and parasites are seldom completely congruent, suggesting that phenomena other than cospeciation play an important role in the evolution of host-parasite assemblages. Other coevolutionary phenomena, such as host switching, parasite duplication (speciation on the host), sorting (extinction), and failure to speciate can also influence host-parasite assemblages. Using mitochondrial and nuclear protein-coding DNA sequences, I reconstructed the phylogeny of ectoparasitic toucan chewing lice in the Austrophilopterus cancellosus subspecies complex and compared this phylogeny with the phylogeny of the hosts, the Ramphastos toucans, to reconstruct the history of coevolutionary events in this host-parasite assemblage. Three salient findings emerged. First, reconstructions of host and louse phylogenies indicate that they do not branch in parallel, and their cophylogenetic history shows little or no significant cospeciation. Second, members of monophyletic Austrophilopterus toucan louse lineages are not necessarily restricted to monophyletic host lineages. Often, closely related lice are found on more distantly related but sympatric toucan hosts. Third, the geographic distribution of the hosts apparently plays a role in the speciation of these lice. These results suggest that for some louse lineages biogeography may be more important than host associations in structuring louse populations and species, particularly when host life history (e.g., hole nesting) or parasite life history (e.g., phoresis) might promote frequent host switching events between syntopic host species. These findings highlight the importance of integrating biogeographic information into cophylogenetic studies.
从历史上看,宿主和寄生虫系统发育的比较主要集中在共同物种形成上。然而,许多这样的比较表明,宿主和寄生虫的系统发育很少完全一致,这表明除共同物种形成之外的其他现象在宿主 - 寄生虫组合的进化中起着重要作用。其他协同进化现象,如宿主转换、寄生虫复制(在宿主上物种形成)、分类(灭绝)以及未能形成新物种,也会影响宿主 - 寄生虫组合。利用线粒体和核蛋白编码DNA序列,我重建了 Austrophilopterus cancellosus 亚种复合体中外寄生性巨嘴鸟咀嚼虱的系统发育,并将此系统发育与宿主(巨嘴鸟)的系统发育进行比较,以重建这个宿主 - 寄生虫组合中协同进化事件的历史。出现了三个显著发现。第一,宿主和虱子系统发育的重建表明它们并非平行分支,并且它们的共系统发育历史几乎没有或没有显著的共同物种形成。第二,单系 Austrophilopterus 巨嘴鸟虱谱系的成员不一定局限于单系宿主谱系。通常,在亲缘关系较远但同域的巨嘴鸟宿主上发现亲缘关系密切的虱子。第三,宿主的地理分布显然在这些虱子的物种形成中起作用。这些结果表明,对于某些虱子谱系来说,生物地理学在构建虱子种群和物种方面可能比宿主关联更重要,特别是当宿主生活史(例如,洞穴筑巢)或寄生虫生活史(例如,携带现象)可能促进同域宿主物种之间频繁的宿主转换事件时。这些发现突出了将生物地理信息整合到共系统发育研究中的重要性。