Vorburger C, Herzog J, Rouchet R
EAWAG, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Dübendorf, Switzerland.
Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland.
J Evol Biol. 2017 Apr;30(4):762-772. doi: 10.1111/jeb.13040. Epub 2017 Jan 19.
Specialization on different host plants can promote evolutionary diversification of herbivorous insects. Work on pea aphids (Acyrthosiphon pisum) has contributed significantly to the understanding of this process, demonstrating that populations associated with different host plants exhibit performance trade-offs across hosts, show adaptive host choice and genetic differentiation and possess different communities of bacterial endosymbionts. Populations specialized on different secondary host plants during the parthenogenetic summer generations are also described for the black bean aphid (Aphis fabae complex) and are usually treated as different (morphologically cryptic) subspecies. In contrast to pea aphids, however, host choice and mate choice are decoupled in black bean aphids, because populations from different summer hosts return to the same primary host plant to mate and lay overwintering eggs. This could counteract evolutionary divergence, and it is currently unknown to what extent black bean aphids using different summer hosts are indeed differentiated. We addressed this question by microsatellite genotyping and endosymbiont screening of black bean aphids collected in summer from the goosefoot Chenopodium album (subspecies A. f. fabae) and from thistles of the genus Cirsium (subspecies A. f. cirsiiacanthoides) across numerous sites in Switzerland and France. Our results show clearly that aphids from Cirsium and Chenopodium exhibit strong and geographically consistent genetic differentiation and that they differ in their frequencies of infection with particular endosymbionts. The dependence on a joint winter host has thus not prevented the evolutionary divergence into summer host-adapted populations that appear to have evolved mechanisms of reproductive isolation within a common mating habitat.
对不同寄主植物的专化能够促进植食性昆虫的进化多样化。对豌豆蚜(Acyrthosiphon pisum)的研究极大地推动了我们对这一过程的理解,研究表明,与不同寄主植物相关的种群在不同寄主间表现出性能权衡,具有适应性的寄主选择和遗传分化,并且拥有不同的细菌内共生体群落。黑豆蚜(Aphis fabae complex)在孤雌生殖的夏季世代中,寄生于不同第二寄主植物上的种群也有相关描述,通常被视为不同的(形态上难以区分的)亚种。然而,与豌豆蚜不同的是,黑豆蚜的寄主选择和配偶选择是分离的,因为来自不同夏季寄主的种群会回到同一主要寄主植物上交配并产下越冬卵。这可能会抵消进化分歧,目前尚不清楚利用不同夏季寄主的黑豆蚜在多大程度上确实存在分化。我们通过对瑞士和法国多个地点夏季采集的、寄生于藜科植物藜(Chenopodium album,亚种A. f. fabae)和蓟属植物蓟(Cirsium,亚种A. f. cirsiiacanthoides)上的黑豆蚜进行微卫星基因分型和内共生体筛查,解决了这个问题。我们的结果清楚地表明,来自蓟属植物和藜科植物的蚜虫表现出强烈且地理分布一致的遗传分化,并且它们在特定内共生体的感染频率上存在差异。因此,对共同冬季寄主的依赖并未阻止其进化为适应夏季寄主的种群,这些种群似乎在共同的交配栖息地内进化出了生殖隔离机制。