4.7 Article

Getting there and around: Host range oscillations during colonization of the Canary Islands by the parasitic nematode Spauligodon

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages 533-549

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.14458

Keywords

host specificity; host switches; parasite island syndrome; phylogeography; range expansion

Funding

  1. Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia [IF/01257/2012, SFRH/BD/77332/2011]
  2. University of Otago Research Grant (UORG)
  3. Operational Programme for Competitiveness Factors-COMPETE
  4. FCT-Foundation for Science and Technology (Portugal) [PTDC/BIA-BEC/101256/2008, FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-007062]

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Episodes of expansion and isolation in geographic range over space and time, during which parasites have the opportunity to expand their host range, are linked to the development of host-parasite mosaic assemblages and parasite diversification. In this study, we investigated whether island colonization events lead to host range oscillations in a taxon of host-specific parasitic nematodes of the genus Spauligodon in the Canary Islands. We further investigated whether range oscillations also resulted in shifts in host breadth (i.e., specialization), as expected for parasites on islands. Parasite phylogeny and divergence time estimates were inferred from molecular data with Bayesian methods. Host divergence times were set as calibration priors after a priori evaluation with a global-fit method of which individual host-parasite associations likely represent cospeciation links. Parasite colonization history was reconstructed, followed by an estimation of oscillation events and specificity level. The results indicate the presence of four Spauligodon clades in the Canary Islands, which originated from at least three different colonization events. We found evidence of host range oscillations to truly novel hosts, which in one case led to higher diversification. Contemporary host-parasite associations show strong host specificity, suggesting that changes in host breadth were limited to the shift period. Lineages with more frequent and wider taxonomic host range oscillations prior to the initial colonization event showed wider range oscillations during colonization and diversification within the archipelago. Our results suggest that a lineage's evolutionary past may be the best indicator of a parasite's potential for future range expansions.

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