Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849, USA
Department of Biology and Graduate Program in Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003, USA.
Biol Lett. 2015 Dec;11(12):20150924. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2015.0924.
The specificity of the interactions between plants and their consumers varies considerably. The evolutionary and ecological factors underlying this variation are unclear. Several potential explanatory factors vary with latitude, for example plant species richness and the intensity of herbivory. Here, we use comparative phylogenetic methods to test the effect of latitude on host range in scale insects. We find that, on average, scale insects that occur in lower latitudes are more polyphagous. This result is at odds with the general pattern of greater host-plant specificity of insects in the tropics. We propose that this disparity reflects a high cost for host specificity in scale insects, stemming from unusual aspects of scale insect life history, for example, passive wind-driven dispersal. More broadly, the strong evidence for pervasive effects of geography on host range across insect groups stands in stark contrast to the weak evidence for constraints on host range due to genetic trade-offs.
植物与其消费者之间的相互作用具有很大的特异性。这种变异的进化和生态因素尚不清楚。几个潜在的解释因素随纬度而变化,例如植物物种丰富度和食草强度。在这里,我们使用比较系统发育方法来检验纬度对介壳虫寄主范围的影响。我们发现,平均而言,生活在低纬度地区的介壳虫具有更强的多食性。这一结果与热带昆虫寄主植物特异性更强的一般模式不一致。我们提出,这种差异反映了介壳虫寄主特异性的高成本,这源于介壳虫生活史的特殊方面,例如被动的风传播扩散。更广泛地说,地理因素对昆虫类群寄主范围的普遍影响的有力证据与由于遗传权衡而对寄主范围的限制的微弱证据形成鲜明对比。