Center for Integrative Biodiversity Discovery, Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin, Germany.
National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, USA.
BMC Evol Biol. 2020 Nov 23;20(1):155. doi: 10.1186/s12862-020-01716-2.
Parasitoidism, a specialized life strategy in which a parasite eventually kills its host, is frequently found within the insect order Hymenoptera (wasps, ants and bees). A parasitoid lifestyle is one of two dominant life strategies within the hymenopteran superfamily Cynipoidea, with the other being an unusual plant-feeding behavior known as galling. Less commonly, cynipoid wasps exhibit inquilinism, a strategy where some species have adapted to usurp other species' galls instead of inducing their own. Using a phylogenomic data set of ultraconserved elements from nearly all lineages of Cynipoidea, we here generate a robust phylogenetic framework and timescale to understand cynipoid systematics and the evolution of these life histories.
Our reconstructed evolutionary history for Cynipoidea differs considerably from previous hypotheses. Rooting our analyses with non-cynipoid outgroups, the Paraulacini, a group of inquilines, emerged as sister-group to the rest of Cynipoidea, rendering the gall wasp family Cynipidae paraphyletic. The families Ibaliidae and Liopteridae, long considered archaic and early-branching parasitoid lineages, were found nested well within the Cynipoidea as sister-group to the parasitoid Figitidae. Cynipoidea originated in the early Jurassic around 190 Ma. Either inquilinism or parasitoidism is suggested as the ancestral and dominant strategy throughout the early evolution of cynipoids, depending on whether a simple (three states: parasitoidism, inquilinism and galling) or more complex (seven states: parasitoidism, inquilinism and galling split by host use) model is employed.
Our study has significant impact on understanding cynipoid evolution and highlights the importance of adequate outgroup sampling. We discuss the evolutionary timescale of the superfamily in relation to their insect hosts and host plants, and outline how phytophagous galling behavior may have evolved from entomophagous, parasitoid cynipoids. Our study has established the framework for further physiological and comparative genomic work between gall-making, inquiline and parasitoid lineages, which could also have significant implications for the evolution of diverse life histories in other Hymenoptera.
寄生,一种专门的生活策略,其中寄生虫最终会杀死它的宿主,在膜翅目昆虫(黄蜂、蚂蚁和蜜蜂)中经常发现。寄生生活方式是膜翅目超级科 Cynipoidea 中的两种主要生活策略之一,另一种是不寻常的植物取食行为,称为瘿。不那么常见的是,瘿蜂表现出拟寄生行为,即一些物种已经适应了篡夺其他物种的瘿,而不是诱导自己的瘿。利用来自 Cynipoidea 几乎所有谱系的超保守元件的系统基因组数据集,我们在这里生成了一个稳健的系统发育框架和时间表,以了解瘿蜂的系统发生和这些生活史的进化。
我们对 Cynipoidea 的重建进化历史与以前的假说有很大的不同。用非瘿蜂外群 Paraulacini 作为根,一个拟寄生群体,作为 Cynipoidea 其余部分的姐妹群出现,使得瘿蜂科 Cynipidae 成为并系群。长期以来被认为是古老和早期分支的寄生线科 Ibaliidae 和 Liopteridae,被发现嵌套在 Cynipoidea 中,是寄生的 Figitidae 的姐妹群。Cynipoidea 起源于早侏罗世,大约在 1.9 亿年前。根据采用的是简单(三种状态:寄生、拟寄生和瘿)还是更复杂(七种状态:寄生、拟寄生和瘿分裂为宿主使用)的模型,寄生或拟寄生被认为是整个瘿蜂早期进化的原始和主导策略。
我们的研究对理解瘿蜂的进化有重大影响,并强调了适当的外群采样的重要性。我们讨论了超级家族的进化时间表与它们的昆虫宿主和宿主植物的关系,并概述了食虫性寄生瘿蜂如何从食虫性、寄生性瘿蜂进化而来。我们的研究建立了进一步研究瘿蜂、拟寄生和寄生谱系之间的生理和比较基因组学的框架,这也可能对其他膜翅目昆虫中多样化生活史的进化产生重大影响。