Haine Eleanor R, Martin Joanne, Cook James M
Division of Biology, Imperial College London, Silwood Park Campus, Ascot, Berkshire SL5 7PY, UK.
BMC Evol Biol. 2006 Oct 13;6:83. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-6-83.
Figs and fig-pollinating wasps are obligate mutualists that have coevolved for ca. 90 million years. They have radiated together, but do not show strict cospeciation. In particular, it is now clear that many fig species host two wasp species, so there is more wasp speciation than fig speciation. However, little is known about how fig wasps speciate.
We studied variation in 71 fig-pollinating wasps from across the large geographic range of Ficus rubiginosa in Australia. All wasps sampled belong to one morphological species (Pleistodontes imperialis), but we found four deep mtDNA clades that differed from each other by 9-17% nucleotides. As these genetic distances exceed those normally found within species and overlap those (10-26%) found between morphologically distinct Pleistodontes species, they strongly suggest cryptic fig wasp species. mtDNA clade diversity declines from all four present in Northern Queensland to just one in Sydney, near the southern range limit. However, at most sites multiple clades coexist and can be found in the same tree or even the same fig fruit and there is no evidence for parallel sub-division of the host fig species. Both mtDNA data and sequences from two nuclear genes support the monophyly of the "P. imperialis complex" relative to other Pleistodontes species, suggesting that fig wasp divergence has occurred without any host plant shift. Wasps in clade 3 were infected by a single strain (W1) of Wolbachia bacteria, while those in other clades carried a double infection (W2+W3) of two other strains.
Our study indicates that cryptic fig-pollinating wasp species have developed on a single host plant species, without the involvement of host plant shifts, or parallel host plant divergence. Despite extensive evidence for coevolution between figs and fig wasps, wasp speciation may not always be linked strongly with fig speciation.
无花果和为其授粉的黄蜂是专性互利共生者,它们已经共同进化了约9000万年。它们共同辐射演化,但并未表现出严格的共物种形成。特别是,现在很清楚,许多无花果物种容纳两种黄蜂物种,因此黄蜂物种形成比无花果物种形成更多。然而,关于无花果黄蜂如何物种形成知之甚少。
我们研究了来自澳大利亚锈叶榕大地理分布范围内的71种为其授粉的黄蜂的变异情况。所有采样的黄蜂都属于一个形态物种(帝王榕小蜂),但我们发现了四个深度线粒体DNA分支,它们彼此之间的核苷酸差异为9%-17%。由于这些遗传距离超过了通常在物种内发现的距离,并且与在形态上不同的榕小蜂物种之间发现的距离(10%-26%)重叠,它们强烈表明存在隐存的无花果黄蜂物种。线粒体DNA分支多样性从昆士兰北部存在的所有四个分支下降到悉尼(靠近南部分布界限)的仅一个分支。然而,在大多数地点,多个分支共存,并且可以在同一棵树甚至同一个无花果果实中发现,而且没有证据表明寄主无花果物种存在平行细分。线粒体DNA数据和来自两个核基因的序列都支持“帝王榕小蜂复合体”相对于其他榕小蜂物种的单系性,这表明无花果黄蜂的分化发生时没有任何寄主植物的转移。分支3中的黄蜂被一种沃尔巴克氏体细菌的单一菌株(W1)感染,而其他分支中的黄蜂则携带另外两种菌株的双重感染(W2+W3)。
我们的研究表明,隐存的为无花果授粉的黄蜂物种是在单一寄主植物物种上形成的,没有寄主植物转移或平行的寄主植物分化的参与。尽管有大量证据表明无花果和无花果黄蜂之间存在共同进化,但黄蜂物种形成可能并不总是与无花果物种形成紧密相关。