4.7 Article

Diversification linked to larval host plant in the butterfly Eumedonia eumedon

期刊

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
卷 32, 期 1, 页码 182-197

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16728

关键词

butterflies; ddRADseq; host races; phylogeography; speciation

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It is commonly acknowledged that the relationship between phytophagous insects and their host plants impacts insect diversification. However, research on host-associated genetic differentiation and reproductive isolation mechanisms in insect populations is still limited. This study examined the geranium argus butterfly and found evidence of host-associated genetic differentiation and reproductive isolation, with the extent of isolation correlating with the taxonomic relatedness of the host plants.
It is widely accepted that the relationship between phytophagous insects and their host plants influences insect diversification. However, studies addressed at documenting host-associated genetic differentiation (HAD) and the mechanisms that drive reproductive isolation in host-associated lineages (or host races) are still scarce relative to insect diversity. To uncover further evidence on the HAD processes in Lepidoptera, we investigated the genetic structure of the geranium argus butterfly (Eumedonia eumedon) and tested for isolation by ecology (IBE) vs. isolation by distance (IBD). Genomic data revealed an array of host races (three of them in the same mountain range, the Cantabrian Mountains, northern Iberia) at apparently distinct levels of reproductive isolation. We found a pattern of IBE mediated by HAD at both local and European scales, in which genetic differentiation between populations and individuals correlated significantly with the taxonomic relatedness of the host plants. IBD was significant only when considered at the wider European scale. We hypothesize that, locally, HAD between Geranium-feeding populations was caused (at least partially) by allochrony, that is via adaptation of adult flight time to the flowering period of each host plant species. Nevertheless, the potential reproductive isolation between populations using Erodium and populations using Geranium cannot be explained by allochrony or IBD, and other mechanisms are expected to be at play.

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