4.2 Article

From kissing to belly stridulation: comparative analysis reveals surprising diversity, rapid evolution, and much homoplasy in the mating behaviour of 27 species of sepsid flies (Diptera: Sepsidae)

期刊

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
卷 22, 期 11, 页码 2146-2156

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2009.01826.x

关键词

comparative studies; insects; speciation

资金

  1. Ministry of Education in Singapore [R-154-000-256-112]
  2. US National Science Foundation [0334948]
  3. Division Of Environmental Biology
  4. Direct For Biological Sciences [0334948] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Our understanding of how fast mating behaviour evolves in insects is rather poor due to a lack of comparative studies among insect groups for which phylogenetic relationships are known. Here, we present a detailed study of the mating behaviour of 27 species of Sepsidae (Diptera) for which a well-resolved and supported phylogeny is available. We demonstrate that mating behaviour is extremely diverse in sepsids with each species having its own mating profile. We define 32 behavioural characters and document them with video clips. Based on sister species comparisons, we provide several examples where mating behaviour evolves faster than all sexually dimorphic morphological traits. Mapping the behaviours onto the molecular tree reveals much homoplasy, comparable to that observed for third positions of mitochondrial protein-encoding genes. A partitioned Bremer support (PBS) analysis reveals conflict between the molecular and behavioural data, but behavioural characters have higher PBS values per parsimony-informative character than DNA sequence characters.

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