Augustyn Willem J, Anderson Bruce, van der Merwe Jeroen F, Ellis Allan G
Botany and Zoology Department, University of Stellenbosch, Stellenbosch, South Africa.
BMC Evol Biol. 2017 Mar 9;17(1):72. doi: 10.1186/s12862-017-0916-0.
The evolution of reproductive isolation between herbivorous insect populations is often initiated by shifts to novel host-plants, a process that underlies some of the best examples of ecological speciation. However, it is not well understood why host-shifts occur. Arguably the most common hypothesis is that host-shifts occur in response to competition, while a less frequently invoked hypothesis is that herbivores adapt locally to geographic differences in potential host-plant communities. Here we investigate whether geographic variation in host-plant availability is likely to have driven host-shifts in restio leafhoppers. We studied local adaptation of a camouflaged restio leafhopper species, Cephalelus uncinatus, to host-plants in the Restionaceae (restios); a family of plants with exceptional diversity in the anomalously species-rich Cape Floristic Region (CFR). To determine whether C. uncinatus experiences heterogeneous host communities across its range, we first quantified the degree of geographic overlap between C. uncinatus and each of its associated host-plant species. Then we quantified trait divergence (host preference, body size and colour) for three pairs of C. uncinatus populations found on different host-plant species differing in their degree of spatial overlap. Spectral reflectance was modelled in bird visual space to investigate whether body colour divergence in C. uncinatus corresponds to leaf sheath colour differences between restio species as perceived by potential predators.
We demonstrate that C. uncinatus is forced to use different restio species in different regions because of turnover in available host species across its range. Comparisons between geographically separated populations were consistent with local adaptation: restio leafhoppers had preferences for local host-plants over alternative host-plants and matched local plants better in terms of size and colour.
Spatial turnover in host-plant availability has likely facilitated host-shifts in C. uncinatus. Spatial turnover in host-plant availability may be an important driver of insect diversification in the CFR and globally.
食草昆虫种群之间生殖隔离的演变通常始于向新宿主植物的转变,这一过程是一些生态物种形成的最佳实例的基础。然而,宿主转变发生的原因尚不清楚。可以说,最常见的假说是宿主转变是对竞争的响应,而较少被提及的假说是食草动物在当地适应潜在宿主植物群落的地理差异。在这里,我们研究宿主植物可利用性的地理差异是否可能驱动了帚灯草叶蝉的宿主转变。我们研究了一种具有伪装色的帚灯草叶蝉物种——钩状头帚灯草(Cephalelus uncinatus)对帚灯草科(帚灯草)植物的局部适应性;帚灯草科植物在物种异常丰富的开普植物区(CFR)具有非凡的多样性。为了确定钩状头帚灯草在其分布范围内是否经历了不同的宿主群落,我们首先量化了钩状头帚灯草与其每个相关宿主植物物种之间的地理重叠程度。然后,我们对在空间重叠程度不同的三种不同宿主植物物种上发现的三对钩状头帚灯草种群的性状差异(宿主偏好、体型和颜色)进行了量化。在鸟类视觉空间中对光谱反射率进行建模,以研究钩状头帚灯草的体色差异是否与潜在捕食者所感知的帚灯草物种之间的叶鞘颜色差异相对应。
我们证明,由于其分布范围内可用宿主物种的更替,钩状头帚灯草在不同地区被迫使用不同的帚灯草物种。地理隔离种群之间的比较与局部适应性一致:帚灯草叶蝉对当地宿主植物的偏好高于替代宿主植物,并且在体型和颜色方面与当地植物的匹配度更高。
宿主植物可利用性的空间更替可能促进了钩状头帚灯草的宿主转变。宿主植物可利用性的空间更替可能是CFR和全球昆虫多样化的一个重要驱动因素。